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PREFERRED LIES AND OTHER TALES: Skimming the Cream of a Life in Sports
 
 
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PREFERRED LIES AND OTHER TALES: Skimming the Cream of a Life in Sports [Hardcover]

Jack Whitaker (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 6, 1998

"No sportscaster has ever used the English language better than Jack Whitaker."
-- Chris Berman

For nearly fifty years, Jack Whitaker has brought style, grace, and wit to the American sporting scene through his reporting, his commentaries, and his essays. He's a living testament to the days when sports and television were glamorous, not routine; when world travel was adventure, not just transportation; when deluxe hotels and good scotch were as much a part of a TV journalist's arsenal as a blow-dryer and a perma-tan. There isn't a major sporting event in the world that he hasn't seen firsthand and helped put before the American people: Major League Baseball, the first Super Bowl, all of golf's majors, the Kentucky Derby, tennis's U.S. Open, the Olympics, the Indianapolis 500, Ali-Norton at Yankee Stadium...

It's been a helluva life and a helluva ride -- one as exhilarating as the Cresta itself, that run down the St. Moritz bobsled course where Whitaker joined Errol Flynn, Paul Gallico, and the Duke of Westphalia in having taken the ultimate sleigh ride and living to tell about it. In Preferred Lies and Other Tales, he shares his experiences and his thoughts in his trademark elegant, entertaining, and graceful style.

The places he's been and the events he's been a part of! Whitaker was on hand for much of the rise of pro football to its preeminent position in the 1960s, calling the first Super Bowl before it bore that hype-filled moniker; he was standing behind the 18th green at Pebble Beach with Jack Nicklaus when Tom Watson chipped in on 17 to steal the U.S. Open; he rode in the pace car at the Indy 500 the year a starting-line crash wiped out a third of the field; he covered Secretariat's Belmont, when the big red stallion smashed all records with a 32-length victory, providing compensation to Whitaker for the embarrassing Kentucky Derby three years earlier when he arrived in the winner's circle to discover that none of the people involved with upset winner Canonero II spoke a word of English; and in the 1960s and '70s he was a part of the scene at P J. Clarke's, the legendary New York watering hole where Reggie Jackson celebrated his three-homer World Series game by drinking with Governor Hugh Carey, and a maître d' might greet the arrival of a Supreme Court justice seeking a table by calling out, "It'll be ten minutes, Arthur."

From the paddock to Pebble Beach, from the backstretch at Churchill Downs to the fairways of St. Andrews, with stops all around the world -- Paris, Le Mans, Havana, Australia, Cold War-era Moscow, and the splendor of Augusta National -- Whitaker has had the opportunity, in the unforgettable words of Henry Longhurst, to "skim the cream" of the sports world's bounty. Like the best of Red Smith, Preferred Lies and Other Tales is a delightful reflection on the stories, events, and people that made us all fall in love with sports in the first place.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In a TV universe crammed with cliché, sportscaster Jack Whitaker has managed to survive for half a century, his dignity intact, his respect for the word unquestioned. Whether perched in the press box or standing on the sidelines of our various fields of play, he's imparted a certain elegance, poetry, and wit from his microphone to our living rooms. Not surprisingly, his memoirs--whether he's in Normandy after D-day or Louisville on Derby day--are as limber and engaging as his commentaries.

A world-class raconteur, Whitaker writes affectionately of the early days of sports television, but he's no mere booster. If American television and sports seemed to grow up hand in hand, Whitaker won't hold his tongue on ways in which they have not matured well together. Nor is he about to make any effort to control his affection for golf and horse racing, the two sports that have particularly captured his heart, and why should he? His writing on these pursuits is superb. And while his chapter on the favorite courses he's played should turn golfers green with envy, it doesn't; his reportage is too generous for that.

Whitaker's been a privileged observer--and sharer. In his years at CBS and ABC, he has traveled the world, covered the mighty, been thrilled by victory, and agonized over defeat. His memoirs, to be sure, are a fan's notes, but they are laced with perspective and conclude with advice: "Sports cannot end wars, erase racism, or end poverty, but properly guided they can be a more positive force in these areas than they are now. To help with that guidance seems a worthwhile challenge for a new generation of sportscasters and sportswriters. All they must remember is that it's an adventure, not brain surgery for children." Among today's self-enthralled talking heads, that's become harder than it seems. --Jeff Silverman

From Publishers Weekly

Whitaker, now a freelancer, was in on television almost at its start, debuting in Philadelphia in 1950 and spending the next four decades with CBS and then ABC. He is known to viewers primarily as a golf commentator, but he has also covered horse racing's Triple Crown events, the first Super Bowl, the Olympics and the Indianapolis 500. It is clear from this book, however, that his chief interest is the links, and he is at his best in his interviews with the greats of the game, including Gene Sarazen, Sam Snead, Ben Hogan and Jack Nicklaus, although he also provides charming reminiscences with baseballer Frankie Frisch and Martina Navratilova. New Yorkers will enjoy his memories of 52nd Street, when it was filled with famous bars where athletes and reporters met. There are dull spots, too: the passage on defunct TV golf shows like the Chrysler 18 Holes of Championship Golf is acutely boring, and the chapter on his own favorite courses is nothing that every other golf writer hasn't done. In short, hardly a great work of its type?a little less skimming the cream and a little more depth would have led to a richer book.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster; 1ST edition (October 6, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0684842726
  • ISBN-13: 978-0684842721
  • Product Dimensions: 8.5 x 5.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,491,926 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Whitaker writes who he is., February 6, 1999
This review is from: PREFERRED LIES AND OTHER TALES: Skimming the Cream of a Life in Sports (Hardcover)
Jack Whitaker spins stories not only about exotic people and places; he also reveals a great deal about himself. His content and style clearly communicate a man who deeply appreciates the important things in life, a perspective that allows him to keep his long professional career, with its legion chance-of-a lifetime experiences, in perspective. Whitaker's book is a testimony to gratitude, not ego. "Preferred Lies and Other Tales" is, ultimately, stories less about sports, and more about life. In a culture flooded with hype, Jack Whitaker is a voice of hope.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of Greatest Sports Commentators Comments on Career, May 25, 2001
By 
rodboomboom (Dearborn, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)   
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This review is from: PREFERRED LIES AND OTHER TALES: Skimming the Cream of a Life in Sports (Hardcover)
Whittaker will also remain in my memory for his outstanding sports essays given in summary fashion at major sporting events, especially those he gave at golf.

This book is full of a broadcasting career rich in its breadth and depth of sport at the highest level.

Among my favorite Whittaker sampling are: Japanese guest asking for directions from pro George Fazio to the first tee and his response: If he can find Pearl Harbor, he can find the first tee The time in Stuttgart when the rent-a-car place gave him a new Porsche he had trouble shifting the gears, the citizens screaming and whistling in protest of his violation of such a vehicle and his writing: "In total disgrace, I managed somehow to get up the hill and, at long last, gratefully onto the Autobahn before the citizens laid hands upon me." The story of Bob Rossburg and the man telling him that he kicked Tony Lema's ball inbounce, and Rosburg's reaction.

It's all here: horse racing, auto racing, tennis, golf, track and field (great stories behind the Iron Curtain), boxing, etc.

This is a true joy to read from one of the greatest and most articulate, passionate commentators of the game. Truly enjoyable read, which I'm sure I'll do again. You should as well.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"If you are taken hostage," the man was saying, try to keep a little distance between your captors and yourself. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
seventeenth hole, twelfth hole, sixteenth hole, eighteenth fairway, eleventh hole, eighteenth tee, tenth hole, eighteenth hole, eighteenth green, major championships, fourth hole, final hole
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, United States, Super Bowl, Jack Nicklaus, British Open, Ben Hogan, Los Angeles, Frank Chirkinian, Winged Foot, Bob Dailey, Ken Venturi, Kentucky Derby, Tom Watson, Triple Crown, World War, Pine Valley, Augusta National, Dave Marr, New Orleans, Arnold Palmer, Churchill Downs, Frank Gifford, George Fazio, Greg Norman, Pat Summerall
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