THE TOP OF HIS GAME:The Best Sportswritingof W.C. HeinzEdited by Bill Littlefieldhost of NPR's "Only a Game"Library of AmericaMarch 2015"Heavyweight Champion of the Word"—Sports IllustratedIN THOSE VIBRANT POSTWAR DECADES when print was king, W. C. Heinz was the byline to watch for. A pioneer of the long-form sports story, Heinz wrote with a freshness of perception, a gift for characterization, and a finely tuned ear for dialogue, creating a style that has influenced generations of journalists. His profiles of the top athletes of his day— boxers, baseball players, gridiron legends, hockey stars, jockeys, and rodeo riders—are classics of the form, as immediate and affecting today as when first written. Jimmy Breslin called his account of the brief and bloody life of Al "Bummy" Davis, a Brooklyn street tough who became welterweight champion of the world only to die, at age twenty-five, defending himself during a barroom holdup, "the greatest magazine sports story I've ever read, bar none." His celebrated piece on the Dodgers' Pete Reiser, a reckless outfielder who would have made the Hall of Fame had he resisted the urge to catch the uncatchable, is a comic yet inspiring illustration of the maxim "character = fate." And the many late-life memoirs he wrote for his book Once They Heard the Cheers—including portraits of jockey Eddie Arcaro, pitcher Joe Page, Packer Willie Davis, and Heinz's signature subject, Rocky Graziano—are nothing less than mini-masterpieces of the biographer's art.
"Heinz had it all," says David Maraniss of The Washington Post, "a deep understanding of human nature, a wonderful sense of humor, and a writing style so clean and clear that he makes the difficult seem easy, just the way a great athlete does." Here— in thirty-eight timeless pieces, chosen and introduced by NPR's Bill Littlefield—is an American master at the top of his game.
Praise for W. C. Heinz:"Heinz is not just one of the great sportswriters this country has produced, he is one of the great American writers." —MIKE LUPICA"Heinz could make sentences sing, but his special gift was somehow to sound the chord of music that was the man. The subjects of his profiles lived and breathed and laughed and wept with unforgettable vitality." —ROGER KAHN"Heinz is that rare writer who not only becomes more important over time but more essential. His work deserves to be read and treasured by a new generation of readers." —GLENN STOUTBILL LITTLEFIELD has hosted National Public Radio's weekly sports magazine, "Only A Game," since 1993, and written commentaries for NPR and Boston's WBUR-FM for over thirty years. He is the author of seven books, including Only a Game, the novels Prospect and The Circus in the Woods, and the recent collection of sports verse Take Me Out. In 2001, he met W. C. Heinz and they became friends, for which he has been grateful ever since.
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