Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram
Never ever question with our offer, due to the fact that we will certainly consistently provide just what you need. As such as this upgraded book Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works Of Mark Kram, By Mark Kram, you may not locate in the various other place. Yet here, it's very easy. Simply click and also download, you can possess the Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works Of Mark Kram, By Mark Kram When convenience will ease your life, why should take the difficult one? You can acquire the soft file of guide Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works Of Mark Kram, By Mark Kram here and also be member people. Besides this book Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works Of Mark Kram, By Mark Kram, you could likewise find hundreds lists of guides from lots of resources, compilations, publishers, and authors in around the world.
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram
Download Ebook Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram
Imagine Mad Men set not in the advertising world but at 1960s Sports Illustrated, a place where the finest sports staff of any generation was attended by an open bar and almost unlimited expense account. This was the world Mark Kram lived and wrote in, along with his peers including Frank Deford, Dan Jenkins and other major talents. A high school graduate with a gift for revealing the hearts of his subjects, Kram would become one of the greatest sports writers of all time, covering the famed rivalry between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier, Negro League baseball star Cool Papa Bell, doomed soccer legend George Best, Olympic gold medal sprinter Edwin Moses, and others.
The New York Times obituary of Kram in June, 2002 saluted his work in Sports Illustrated by calling him one of its "most lyrical writers of the 1960s and 1970s." Great Men Die Twice selects his best work with a moving introduction by his son, Mark Kram Jr., the PEN/ESPN Award-winning author of Like Any Normal Day.
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram- Amazon Sales Rank: #85877 in Books
- Brand: Kram, Mark, Jr.
- Published on: 2015-06-23
- Released on: 2015-06-23
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 8.18" h x .82" w x 5.49" l, .0 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 304 pages
Review
“[Kram] understood the history and the strategy of the ring, and he could describe a jab or a roundhouse right with the precision that made you feel it...his prose was energetic, inventive...and enormously fun to read.” ―The New York Times
“Richly created stories...[Kram's] writing forever elevated sports reporting to an art form.” ―The Washington Review of Books
“Mark Kram's best pieces can only be described as literature. His elevation of American vernacular and jaundiced native lyricism combined to produce essays that will endure as long as anyone cares to read about sports.” ―Thomas McGuane
“Mark Kram was brittle, but he could be brilliant. At his best, as this collection shows, he wrote about sports as well as anybody ever did. At his very best, no one ever wrote nonfiction for magazines as well as Mark did.” ―Frank Deford
“There has never been another sports writer quite like Mark Kram, brilliant and haunted, with an eye for the fallen and forgotten and the power to capture Ali and Frazier as they destroyed each other in pursuit of greatness. With prose that was by turns muscular, cerebral, and soulful, Kram painted word pictures that deserved life beyond the magazines they appeared in. Now, thanks to this shimmering collection, justice is done.” ―John Schulian, editor, Football: Great Writing About The National Sport
“This wondrous collection of stories will introduce a new generation of readers to Mark Kram's genius…These stories bleed with raw beauty and insight.” ―Michael Leahy, author of When Nothing Else Matters: Michael Jordan's Last Comeback
About the Author
MARK KRAM was one of Sports Illustrated's most acclaimed writers during the 1960s and 70s, and published more pieces on Muhammad Ali for the magazine than any other writer, along with many other features. He also contributed to Esquire, Gentleman's Quarterly, Playboy, and other publications. His articles on boxing have been widely anthologized, including The Best American Sports Writing of the Century, edited by David Halberstam, and The Fights, a collection of essays edited by Richard Ford. His book Ghosts of Manila (HarperCollins, 2001) is the classic account of the third fight between Ali and Joe Frazier. A native of Baltimore, he died in June 2002.
MARK KRAM, JR. is the author of Like Any Normal Day, which received the PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing. His feature articles have won the Sigma Delta Chi award from the Society of Professional Journalists and has been published six times in The Best American Sports Writing Anthology. Kram lives in New Jersey with his family.
Where to Download Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram
Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Literary elitism rarely encountered in traditional sports reporting. By Thomas Moody Although admittedly lacking an adequate contemporary yardstick in which to gage (I regretfully read Sports Illustrated only rarely today; not out of spite but purely out of neglect, the internet fulfilling my sports reporting appetite more than adequately), I’m nonetheless willing to wager that the incomparably high standards and rarefied literary atmosphere in which Mark Kram Sr. wrote while toiling alongside contemporaries and future luminaries Roy Blount Jr., Frank Deford and Dan Jenkins, isn’t nearly as competitive or as consequential at the “magazine” today.And as a result of that literarily creative environment, these talented mid-1960s reporters were allowed to expand their art, essentially unchecked, to produce pieces of pure literary grace, with Mark Kram in particular becoming adept at capturing and broadening what I’d call the “Sports Illustrated Style.” Whether covering a featured event (most often the lead into and denouement of affairs between Muhammed Ali and Joe Frazier), or a discourse on an obscure non-sports related subject, Kram possessed the unique ability to mesmerize while elevating his subject regardless of topic. And fortunate for us, his son, Mark Kram Jr., an author of some renown himself, recognized his father’s genius and collected much of his best work and published it in this wonderful book “Great Men Die Twice.”The wars between Ali and Frazier clearly brought out the best in Kram and these pieces are the obvious selling points for this book, but it is the non-boxing essays that really expose the extent of Kram’s talent. Whether chronicling diverse subjects such as barrel riding over Niagara Falls, the inner psyche of hurdler Edwin Moses, the saga of former Negro League legend Cool Papa Bell or my particular favorite, a fictionalized first person account of former Major League great Hack Wilson, from the dead, maligning the fact that he’d not been elected to the Baseball Hall Of Fame (this was a 1977 Sports Illustrated feature that pre-dated Wilson’s actual election to the Hall in 1979, with many pointing to this article as the convincing motive that pushed the Hall’s Veteran’s Committee to finally relent and elect Wilson), Kram displays a much wider literary capacity than his genre typically represents.With visionary writing like this 1992 Esquire article warning of the long term effects of professional football violence, Kram not only entertained but “reported,” writing about important developments in a style and voice far beyond the daily beat writer; his was sports writing with soul, with thought, with a purpose that not only communicated a message but transcended mere journalism:“Admittedly, it is not easy to control a game that is inherently destructive to the body. Tip the rules to the defense, and you have nothing more than gang war; move them too far toward the offense, and you have mostly conflict without resistance. Part of the NFL dilemma is in its struggle between illusion and reality; it wants to stir the blood without you really absorbing that it IS blood. It also luxuriates in its image of the American war game, strives to be the perfect metaphor for Clausewitz’s ponderings about real-war tactics (circa 1819, i.e. stint on blood and you lose). The warrior ethic is central to the game, and no coach or player can succeed without astute attention to the precise fashioning of a warrior mentality (loss of self), defined by Ernie Barnes, formerly of the Colts and the Chargers, as ‘the aggressive nature that knows no safety zones.’”To become truly entranced by a bygone and ethereal sports writing era, a style that has unfortunately been replaced by the turbulent minute-to-minute update of our modern culture, read this now obscure work of one of our truly great sports writers and be enthralled by the span of this man’s talent. Whether interested in the history of the Ali-Frazier saga or great sports writing in general, you will not find better than “Great Men Die Twice.”
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. A Treasure Chest By Richard A. Johnson This is nothing less than a treasure chest of remarkable writing by a gentlemen the esteemed Frank Deford thought was the best magazine nonfiction writer in America. Sort of like Gordie Howe calling you his toughest opponent. Kram's profile of star crossed soccer icon George Best alone is worth the price of this volume as it serves as both a magnifying glass for and crystal ball of the Man United wingers brilliant on field ballet and inevitable self destructive denouement. This is a volume I savor and is on bedside table reserved for the few sports writers in his league whose number include Ring Lardner and his boys, John Schulian, Frank Deford, Bob Ryan, Jim Murray, Ray Fitzgerald, Leigh Montville, Glenn Stout, Bill Heinz, Red Smith, Charlie Pierce,George Kimball, Brian Glanville, Simon Kuper, and David Halberstam among others.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Just Read It! By rick joseph If you like sports at all, you will love this book. It takes you on journeys and into lives, bright, dark and rich, of sports heroes and villains we all thought we knew. I wasn't familiar with Mark Kram's work until I read this book. How much I missed over the years. I love a good book. I'm a fan of the written word. When I "discover" someone altogether original I just have to share it. And Mark Kram was an unquestioned "original". Cerebral and heartfelt, his style is his alone and you can't help but keep turning those pages. How proud he must be with the work of his son in making this book possible. So worth a few hours of your time you won't want back! Can't recommend it more highly.
See all 5 customer reviews... Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark KramGreat Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram PDF
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram iBooks
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram ePub
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram rtf
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram AZW
Great Men Die Twice: The Selected Works of Mark Kram, by Mark Kram Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar