Serenity: A Boxing Memoir

Author:   Ralph Wiley
Publisher:   University of Nebraska Press
ISBN:  

9780803298163


Pages:   242
Publication Date:   01 June 2000
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
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Serenity: A Boxing Memoir


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Author:   Ralph Wiley
Publisher:   University of Nebraska Press
Imprint:   University of Nebraska Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.289kg
ISBN:  

9780803298163


ISBN 10:   0803298161
Pages:   242
Publication Date:   01 June 2000
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of print, replaced by POD   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufatured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

This is a surprising book, a terrific book. It's not about boxing, but about an odd, demanding world in which boxing is the thread, the key to existence. Wiley deftly broadens the delineation of this world and its people. Perceptive reporting is the foundation and perceptive reporting is rare enough. Wiley enhances it with clear, quick writing laced with humour and with a sensitivity that lends brilliance to this impressive work. - Robert W. Creamer, author of 'Baseball and other matters in 1941' Ralph Wiley, with 'Serenity', has produced an original book about the ring... He can dig beneath the surface and show us what really happened in a bout: why Thomas Hearns, with too much faith in his powerful right hand, lost to Sugar Ray Leonard in their first match... Or why Roberto Duran was acting out of prudence, not cowardice, when he quit in his second fight against Leonard... Yet the book is not really about boxing. Boxing in Serenity is what T. S. Eliot, speaking of plot, called the meat a burglar brings to distract the watchdog. The book is really about growing up in a world where you had to defend yourself physically to survive. - New York Times. Wiley's rapport with boxers is profound. - Publisher's Weekly. Wiley is one writer who really knows his way around a boxing ring... [He writes] with passion and understanding about complex, violent men and their oddly redemptive sport. - Booklist


This is a surprising book, a terrific book. It's not about boxing, but about an odd, demanding world in which boxing is the thread, the key to existence. Wiley deftly broadens the delineation of this world and its people. Perceptive reporting is the foundation and perceptive reporting is rare enough. Wiley enhances it with clear, quick writing laced with humour and with a sensitivity that lends brilliance to this impressive work. - Robert W. Creamer, author of 'Baseball and other matters in 1941' Ralph Wiley, with 'Serenity', has produced an original book about the ring... He can dig beneath the surface and show us what really happened in a bout: why Thomas Hearns, with too much faith in his powerful right hand, lost to Sugar Ray Leonard in their first match... Or why Roberto Duran was acting out of prudence, not cowardice, when he quit in his second fight against Leonard... Yet the book is not really about boxing. Boxing in Serenity is what T. S. Eliot, speaking of plot, called the meat a burglar brings to distract the watchdog. The book is really about growing up in a world where you had to defend yourself physically to survive. - New York Times. Wiley's rapport with boxers is profound. - Publisher's Weekly. Wiley is one writer who really knows his way around a boxing ring... [He writes] with passion and understanding about complex, violent men and their oddly redemptive sport. - Booklist


""This is a surprising book, a terrific book. It's not about boxing, but about an odd, demanding world in which boxing is the thread, the key to existence. Wiley deftly broadens the delineation of this world and its people. Perceptive reporting is the foundation and perceptive reporting is rare enough. Wiley enhances it with clear, quick writing laced with humour and with a sensitivity that lends brilliance to this impressive work."" - Robert W. Creamer, author of 'Baseball and other matters in 1941' ""Ralph Wiley, with 'Serenity', has produced an original book about the ring... He can dig beneath the surface and show us what really happened in a bout: why Thomas Hearns, with too much faith in his powerful right hand, lost to Sugar Ray Leonard in their first match... Or why Roberto Duran was acting out of prudence, not cowardice, when he quit in his second fight against Leonard... Yet the book is not really about boxing. Boxing in Serenity is what T. S. Eliot, speaking of plot, called the meat a burglar brings to distract the watchdog. The book is really about growing up in a world where you had to defend yourself physically to survive."" - New York Times. ""Wiley's rapport with boxers is profound."" - Publisher's Weekly. ""Wiley is one writer who really knows his way around a boxing ring... [He writes] with passion and understanding about complex, violent men and their oddly redemptive sport."" - Booklist


Author Information

Ralph Wiley is the author or coauthor of several works, most recently Born to Play: The Eric Davis Story.

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