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Was this ragtag band of precocious intellectuals the worst, or the most courageous, team in college football? From 1892 until the 1930s the legendary Monsters of the Midway dominated college football.However, in 1939 the University of Chicago dropped out of the Big Ten and killed its varsity football program.
But now, it's 1969 and football is back.The resurrection of Chicago football hasn't brought the Monsters back to life.The team plays more like the lab mice of the Midway.The new Maroons are called "the worst team in college ball" by People Magazine.But this under-sized and outnumbered team is also compared to the Trojan hero Hector courageously facing Achilles.They lose game after game.Yet, guys who have IQ scores greater than their weight refuse to give up their mission to win one for their old coach, Wally Hass.Wally's goal is to win one more game before he retires which would make his 100th victory as a coach.
Sex, drugs, rock 'n roll, the Draft Lottery, the Anti-War Movement, and student rebellion on college campuses in 1969 -- the University of Chicago is swimming against the cultural tide by resurrecting its football program. Jack Blair is a small town Hoosier kid who just wanted to go to the best college in the Midwest. In Chicago Jack encounters characters as disparate as Muhammad Ali, Milton Friedman, and George Halas. Jack joins the team for resume-building. His goal is to win the Rhodes scholarship and maybe a football game. Along with his teammates he is swept into the tumult of the late 1960's.He falls in love with a radical feminist who demonstrates against the return of football to Chicago.He rooms with a secular Jewish kid taking ballet whose father has begun manufacturing something called a computer chip.
Jack's teammates reflect the wackiness of the times.There is the 135 pound nose guard and the 295 pound Sumerian scholar.On the team bus the Maroons blast The Mothers of Invention on an 8-track, smoke pot, and worry about a friend's suicide attempt.
An assistant coach rides Jack for not fully committing to the team. His favorite professor chides him to concentrate on his studies.Jack comes of age in a bewildering cultural milieu of frats, jocks, hippies, and Marxist radicals.But his greatest challenge is whether he can learn to love and make an authentic commitment to his team, his girl friend, or his community.
The book is inspired by the author's experience of playing on the resurrected University of Chicago Maroons a/k/a the Monsters of the Midway.Jeff Rasley is also the author of six other books, Pilgrimage: Sturgis to Wounded Knee and Back Home, a Memoir; Bringing Progress to Paradise;Light in the Mountains; False Prophet, a Legal Thriller; Islands in my Dreams;and India - Nepal Himalayas in the Moment.
"After a 30-year hiatus, varsity football returned to the University of Chicago in the 1970s-sort of. One player recalls his ragtag Restoration Era team, from the six-foot-three gentle giant to the 135-pound nose tackle." - Chicago Mag.com
A small town Hoosier boy enrolls in the University of Chicago in 1968. Amidst student demonstrations against the Viet Nam War and the military-industrial complex the University of Chicago resurrects its football program, which has been dead for 30 years. Demonstrators occupy the Administration Building and the football field. So, Jack Blair decides to join the team. His radical-feminist girl friend is not pleased.
From the Author
It's about boy meets girl in college. It's about hard-hitting football action. It's about - an Indiana farm family - a country boy trying to find his way in the big city - the student rebellion against traditions and cultural upheaval of the 60s & 70s - frats & jocks and it's Animal House in the locker room and on the team bus.
It's about intellectuals at the University of Chicago where the first controlled nuclear reaction took place under the football stadium bleachers. It's a buddy book. It's about an old coach who loves his players and just wants to win one more game. It's about a boy becoming a man.
It's inspired by the author's experience of playing on what People Magazine
called "the worst team in college ball."
A Pinterest photo album related to Monsters may be found on Jeff Rasley's Pinterest.com boards. Peruse and enjoy the photos.
Jeff has weaved philosophy, religion, Indiana values, and even the drug culture of the period into a wonderful story about football and the history of the University of Chicago into a book you cannot lay down. In reading the quick review of the book, you would think it is about football and the University of Chicago, but it is so much more. The book covers the issues that all young men face while growing up, including friendship, family, religion, and how important the power of setting goals is. By taking the game of football, he tells a story of how young men can learn about life, while turning around a 30 year culture of one of the most highly recommended schools in our county. Even for those who don't enjoy football, this book gives insight of why so many do, and how it changes those who play the game.
I was one of Jeff's teammates on the Maroons in the 70's and I witnessed many of the events that form the basis for the plot. While the names have been changed to protect the (not so) innocent, Jeff has brilliantly captured the mood of our time together and produced a captivating and entertaining narrative. I know that I will reread this book when I want to recapture a favorite period of my youth. I just wish I had thought of it- or that Jeff would have consulted me on the development of one of the minor characters.
Following in the tradition of In Cold Blood (but without the murders), Mr. Rasley has written a sweeping historical non-fiction novel that explores the relationship between academics and sports through the lens of the Chicago Maroons football team. Starting with the Big Ten in the 1890s, when the team was known as the "Monsters of the Midway," and progressing through the early 1970s, Mr. Rasley seamlessly weaves fascinating historical background information with a personal narrative of the team attempting a comeback after thirty years of dormancy. This book should be of interest to sports fans of all types, especially college football fans who don't know the whole story behind the University of Chicago's decision to drop their football program after such a stellar start, and those concerned by the undue influence of college football on academic institutions.
Jeff Rasley is author of seven books. His most recent is "Pilgrimage: Sturgis to Wounded Knee and Back Home Again, a Memoir". He is a partner in Knowledge Capture Publishing and Editing, a writing coach, and has taught classes for Marian University, IUPUI Continuing Education, Indiana Writers Center, and Oasis. There are photo albums associated with most of Jeff's books on Pinterest at http://pinterest.com/362436/ "False Prophet, a Legal Thriller" is Jeff's first book available as an audiobook.
Jeff is a graduate of the University of Chicago B.A. magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, All-Academic All-State Football Team, and letter winner in swimming and football; Indiana University School of Law J.D. cum laude, Moot Court, and Indiana Law Review; Christian Theological Seminary M.Div. magna cum laude, co-valedictorian, and Faculty Award Scholar. Rasley was admitted to the Indiana, U.S. District Court, and the U.S. Supreme Court Bars. He practiced law in Indianapolis for thirty years. He is currently president of the Basa Village Foundation USA Inc., expedition organizer for Adventure GeoTreks Ltd., program mgr. for Scientech of Indianapolis, and instructor at Marian University.
For chairing the Indiana-Tennessee Civic Memorial Commission Jeff and the Commission received Proclamations of Salutation from the Governors of Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee and Pennsylvania and he was made an honorary Lieutenant Colonel Aide-de-Camp of the Alabama State Militia, a Kentucky Colonel, and honorary Citizen of Tennessee. He was given a Key to the City of Indianapolis for serving as an intern to Mayor Hudnut and preparing a report on the safety conditions of all Indy Parks. Jeff has received the Man of the Year award from the Arthur Jordan YMCA and the Alumni Service Award from the University of Chicago Alumni Board of Governors.
Jeff has published numerous articles and photos in academic and mainstream periodicals, including Newsweek, Chicago Magazine, ABA Journal, Family Law Review, Pacific Magazine, Indy's Child, The Journal of Communal Societies, The Chrysalis Reader, Faith & Fitness Magazine, Friends Journal, and Real Travel Adventures International Magazine.
Jeff gives slide show programs about adventure travel and philanthropy to service clubs, community organizations, and churches. He serves on several nonprofit corporate boards. He is an avid outdoorsman and recreational athlete. He leads trekking-mountaineering expeditions in Nepal and has solo-kayaked around several Pacific island groups. His greatest reading adventure was Marcel Proust's 3600 page "Remembrance of Things Past".
Jeff is married to Alicia Rasley, who is a multi-published author, RITA Award winner, and college professor.
jrasley@juno.com www.jeffreyrasley.com
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