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4 Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Home Run, Touchdown, Triumph,
By Avid Reader (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Best American Sports Writing 1999 (Paperback)
If you've liked previous editions, you'll enjoy this one, too. Same formula, and a seemingly inexhaustible supply of human-interest stories from the sports world. Choosing a favorite or two is tough, but I love the bittersweet ones, such as about one of baseball's great "bonus baby" players who never panned out, or about the insane distance bicycle racer.
I'm delighted to see an article from a blog breaking through the "print barrier" in the series. I'm a little disappointed that so many stories came from the NY Times, as well as a couple of plain things from the Washington Post. A little more edge and a little less conventionality has been nice in other editions.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sporyswriting as Literature,
By
This review is from: The Best American Sports Writing 1999 (Paperback)
The 1999 edition of "The Best American Sports Writing" has plenty of moments that will enthrall avid sports fans and even those less avid who merely like a good story. The series is a national treasure, which collects the best sports related writing every year and puts it into a single easy-to-read volume. The sports included run the gamut from the traditional team sports of baseball and football to more extreme examples like mountaineering. The main requirement for inclusion is great writing, and that's wht this series delivers consistently.The best articles in the 1999 edition include Thomas Boswell's account of Cal Ripken's voluntary stoppage of his historic games played streak, Steve Friedman's biographical article on tormented 2nd generation professional bowler Pete Weber, Allen Abel's hilarous tribute to the long-folded World Hockey Association, and Adam Gopnik's insightful explantion of why World Cup Soccer fails to excite American fans. As always, the quality of the reporting means that even if you have only a margainal interest in the sport described, you'll still find it entertaining. Overall, another fine entry in an outstanding series.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Could have been longer,
By A Customer
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best American Sports Writing 1999 (Paperback)
Hard to believe Amazon.com can't keep their years straight when it comes to reviewing this series. Anyway, the latest collection of sports writing was all right but nothing special by the usual high standards. It's a smaller collection than normal, and there are a few hunting and fishing pieces that I couldn't get into. That didn't leave a whole lot, although what was left was pretty darn good. I particularly enjoyed the articles on the parents of a benched high school football player suing the school, and on the 1998 World Cup.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Celebrating JESUS! :),
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Best American Sports Writing 1999 (Paperback)
I bought this as a gift for my dad for Christmas so Im not sure if it's good or not... I didnt want to give it any stars because I have no idea about it but I had to give it atleast one star. So dont take my rating as a "true" rating.
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The Best American Sports Writing 1999 by Glenn, series editor Stout (Paperback - October 29, 1999)
$15.95
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