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Pocket Books The Jordan Rules: The Inside Story of One Turbulent Season with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls
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Pocket Books The Jordan Rules: The Inside Story of One Turbulent Season with Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls
If followed the NBA in the '90s, you've heard of this one. If you watched The Last Dance, you've heard of this one. But let's get into it just in case: sportswriter Sam Smith got inside with the Chicago Bulls for their first championship, in the 1990-1991 season. For the first time, people saw that Michael Jordan—MJ, His Airness, Air Jordan, whatever you prefer to call him—wasn't just a 2-dimensional basketball god, but a real person with a real personality and real issues. And it gets into teammates and coaches of the era, too. A must-read for anyone looking to fill in relatively-recent NBA history.
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Brand: Riverhead Fever Pitch
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Brand: Riverhead Fever Pitch
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You've probably heard of this one in its form as a Jimmy Fallon-led (remember when he used to act?) 2004 romantic comedy about a guy balancing his love life with his obsessive love for the Boston Red Sox. The movie, actually, is based on a memoir of obsessive devotion to English Football Club Arsenal, written by author Nick Hornby (High Fidelity, A Long Way Down). Funny, interesting, and still engrossing, if you're a sports fan who just can't figure out why you continue rooting for the loser, you'll find home here.
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St. Martin's Press 24: Life Stories and Lessons from the Say Hey Kid
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St. Martin's Press 24: Life Stories and Lessons from the Say Hey Kid
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While we're all missing baseball (and believe me, we all wish we were at a ballpark with a hot dog and a beer right about now), why not read a brand new book from the mind of one of the game's all-time greats? Willie Mays came together with co-author John Shea to tell the story of his incredible, lengthy career (he played from 1951-1973), which saw him play through the civil rights era as one of the game's earliest superstars.
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Back Bay Books What Made Maddy Run: The Secret Struggles and Tragic Death of an All-American Teen
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Back Bay Books What Made Maddy Run: The Secret Struggles and Tragic Death of an All-American Teen
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Things might not always be as shiny as they seem. That's the main takeaway in this crushing book by Kate Fagan, expanded from her ESPN Magazine story about the tragic suicide of Madison Holleran. The story looks at a college athlete who by all accounts would've seemed to "have it all," but always had an unexplainable darkness bubbling under the surface. An absolutely crushing story, but one that deserves to be read.
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Back Bay Books Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPN
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Back Bay Books Those Guys Have All the Fun: Inside the World of ESPN
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This nonfiction story on the past and present of ESPN is long (763 pages) but it's an oral history—so you can read through it like movie dialogue. Starting with stories of the network's very beginning in 1979, and coming up to date with many names that you'll still see on TV every day, this book is gripping, and quite cinematic. So cinematic, in fact, that a major adaptation has been in discussion for a couple years now. Read the book now and get ahead of the curve.
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Workman Publishing Company The Yogi Book
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Workman Publishing Company The Yogi Book
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This isn't so much a book you'll sit down and read for a couple hours as much as it's something you'll pick up when sitting with family and friends and get a good laugh at. As a collection of Yogi Berra's greatest quotes and his funniest anecdotes (and with less than 200 pages), it's hard to beat The Yogi Book.
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Scribner Shoe Dog: A Memoir by the Creator of Nike
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Scribner Shoe Dog: A Memoir by the Creator of Nike
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Did you ever wonder what goes into those cool sneakers you picked up for $120? If you have, great. If you haven't, maybe now is the time to start wondering. Shoe Dog is an interesting, never-before-told story from Phil Knight about founding a company you might have heard of called Nike. Where did 'Just Do It' come from? The answer is here.
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Triumph Books Doc: The Life of Roy Halladay
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Triumph Books Doc: The Life of Roy Halladay
Todd Zolecki's brand-new book (it just came out on May 19) takes a deeper look at the late MLB star Roy Halladay. Halladay, who was inducted in the Hall of Fame last summer, and is yet another case of someone who had demons hiding beneath the surface; Doc tells the fascinating story behind Halladay's balancing act. He was a star on the field, and a beloved father and husband, while also dealing with the dark demons that come along with addiction.
It can feel like there's a divide a lot of the time with celebrity memoirs. Sure, it's someone you want to read from and learn about, but the book isn't in their voice—it's some undisclosed ghostwriter's voice. Well, Undisputed Truth almost certainly has its own ghostwriter, but it's a damn good one, because it reads exactly like a book that Mike Tyson would write. This book hops from one entertaining anecdote to the next, and never feels like you're getting your information from anywhere other than the man itself.
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Simon & Schuster Tiger Woods
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Simon & Schuster Tiger Woods
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When The Last Dance ended, a popular conversation emerged: Who else could possibly be as compelling as Michael Jordan? Who could possibly power their own 10-part documentary series? A common response was Tiger Woods, and as this biography by Jeff Benedict—published just before his incredible 2019 Masters win—proves, there's quite a lot to mine. Tiger Woods talks to more than 250 people in the golfer's orbit, and paints as clear a picture as you could possibly imagine.
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Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster The Dynasty
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Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster The Dynasty
Now 17% Off
OK, we'll be up front with you—The Dynasty isn't out yet. It comes out in September. But you're going to want to pre-order this book from writer Jeff Benedict—who wrote the above Tiger Woods. Here, he has a book of the same ilk on the way about the New England Patriots, with more than 200 interviews conducted about the team's three lightening rods: Robert Kraft, Bill Belichick, and Tom Brady. With Brady now a Tampa Bay Buccaneer, we're guessing there might have been some last-minute edits—and we can't wait to read them.
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PublicAffairs The Victory Machine: The Making and Unmaking of the Warriors Dynasty
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PublicAffairs The Victory Machine: The Making and Unmaking of the Warriors Dynasty
Now 56% Off
If you liked The Jordan Rules, this book from NBA writer Ethan Sherwood Strauss might be the closest thing to a modern-day version of it. Focusing on the late-2010s Golden State Warriors dynasty years, this book takes inside looks at Warriors ownership and the emergence of the dynasty, and at Kevin Durant's entry and exit into the story. The mercurial Durant refused to be interviewed for the book—which, in a lot of ways, that makes it even juicier.
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The Cactus League: A Novel
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The Cactus League: A Novel
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Do you love baseball? Do you love good writing? Then The Cactus League—the debut novel from Paris Review editor Emily Nemens—is for you. You know the baseball player stereotypes: the tobacco-chewing, steroid-using, meathead beefcakes. The characters in The Cactus League are not this. Instead, it looks at the inverse; the guys in spring training. Guys who don't know their future; who don't know if they're even going to make the team. It's fiction, but it's a baseball fan's dream—especially when games aren't currently being played.
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H. G. Bissinger Friday Night Lights
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H. G. Bissinger Friday Night Lights
Credit: AmazonThe book that launched the critically acclaimed film and television show, Bissinger’s chronicle of high school football in West Texas is a snapshot of the gridiron’s grip on small town America.
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John McPhee A Sense of Where You Are: Bill Bradley at Princeton
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John McPhee A Sense of Where You Are: Bill Bradley at Princeton
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The legendary New Yorker writer’s brilliant profile of Bill Bradley—the former U.S. senator and New York Knicks star.
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Jim Bouton Ball Four: Twentieth Anniversary Edition
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Jim Bouton Ball Four: Twentieth Anniversary Edition
The ex-pitcher’s chronicle of his 1969 season with the New York Yankees is one of the greatest books about baseball not because it glorifies the sport, as so many baseball books do, but because it serves as an insider account of the seedier side of the game: the infighting, the womanizing, and Mickey Mantle’s heavy drinking. With its unblinking look at the side of locker room culture most of us will never see up close, it was critically lauded at the time and has become a non-fiction classic—even though it cost him friends on the diamond.
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Andre Agassi Open: An Autobiography
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Andre Agassi Open: An Autobiography
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Memoirs by former athletes are almost always dull, self-glorifying, and cliche. But tennis great Andre Agassi threw out the formula for his 2009 memoir, in which the Punisher peels back the curtain to show readers the price he paid for his success on the court—an unhappy childhood in which he was groomed for tennis greatness at an early age that gave way to a stressful adulthood which found him unfulfilled by his accomplishments.
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Michael Lewis Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game
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Michael Lewis Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game
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You’d be hard-pressed to find a book that’s had more of an impact on the sport it’s about. Lewis’s insightful 2003 profile of Billy Beane and the Oakland Athletics, which was later turned into the Brad Pitt movie of the same name, inspired front offices across the MLB and beyond to rethink their approach to assembling their teams—for better and for worse.
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A. J. Liebling The Sweet Science
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A. J. Liebling The Sweet Science
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No list of sports books could be complete without Liebling’s collection of essays on boxing. The late author and New Yorker writer wrote about boxing the way he wrote about food, another of his favorite subjects—with insight and wit in equal parts. He was so renowned for his meditations on the sport that the Boxing Writers Association of America named a damn award after him.
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Wayne Coffey The Boys of Winter: The Untold Story of a Coach, a Dream, and the 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team
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Wayne Coffey The Boys of Winter: The Untold Story of a Coach, a Dream, and the 1980 U.S. Olympic Hockey Team
Now 17% Off
The former New York Daily News sportswriter’s 2005 book is perhaps the definitive account of the 1980 U.S. Men’s Hockey Team—the group of amateur Americans who took on the superb Russian squad in Lake Placid and performed a “Miracle on Ice.”
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