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Against All Odds: My Life of Hardship, Fast Breaks, and Second Chances Hardcover

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 56 ratings

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B005MWJ08E
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.25 pounds
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 56 ratings

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Scott Brown
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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
56 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the story inspirational, impressive, and satisfying. They describe the book as excellent, enjoyable, and worth the time. Opinions are mixed on the writing quality, with some finding it well-written and easy to read, while others say it's hard to read and repetitive.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

16 customers mention "Inspirational story"16 positive0 negative

Customers find the story inspirational, impressive, and satisfying. They say it's heavy on personal experiences and life lessons. Readers also mention the book is mesmerizing about his struggles during his upbringing.

"...This book really has something for everyone, a powerful and difficult boyhood, the magic of sports, the thrill of the chase in politics, and the..." Read more

"...a way to serve the greater good. If you're looking for an inspirational book, this is it...." Read more

"...He is a remarkable husband and father, and really appreciates his wife and daughters...." Read more

"...a great literary work, however, that said, I found it to be a satisfying autobiography in the Horatio Alger vein and an easy read...." Read more

9 customers mention "Value for money"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book excellent and enjoyable. They say it's worth the time to read.

"...Overall, an enjoyable book and worth the time it took to read it." Read more

"...Definitely worth the read!!!" Read more

"...Very good book, very promising political career." Read more

"...A great read -- especially for those who have been involved in the stark world of childhood abuse. Hopeful and encouraging to all who read this." Read more

6 customers mention "Writing quality"4 positive2 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the writing quality of the book. Some mention it's well-written and easy to read, while others say it's hard to read and repetitive.

"...it to be a satisfying autobiography in the Horatio Alger vein and an easy read...." Read more

"I just couldn't get into this book. I thought the writing was mundane and unreadable...." Read more

"...The style and voice of the author is amazingly consistent throughout leading me to smell ghostwriter...." Read more

"...A lot of inside baseball about his historic win as well. Well written. Highly recommend." Read more

"My Life Is Like A Spiderweb..."
5 out of 5 stars
"My Life Is Like A Spiderweb..."
A reader has to admire someone who describes his life as being like a spiderweb. He obviously isn't suffering from any kind of Messianic complex. The secret of the young Senator from Massachusetts's success is that he can relate to everyone and he isn't afraid to say "thank you" and share credit for his accomplishments. He reminds many voters of Ronald Reagan in that regard. The 40th President didn't care who got the credit just as long as the work got done. As far as the spiderweb comparison goes, Brown means each piece of web is an integral part of the overall construction. "The final creation is an intricate combination of perfectly positioned" links that form the whole. "Sever just one key link and the entire web succumbs to capricious winds. With one cut, the entire web is razed." "My life is like that web. I cannot imagine any piece of its design to be any different; I would not change any part of the experiences that have been woven together to create the larger whole.... If I changed any one of these things, it would change the architecture of my life, and I would no longer be the person I am today." In the first of 18 chapters in this 325-page memoir the author tells how at age 13 he was busted by store security for stealing popular music albums from a Liberty Tree Mall record store. He had already stolen food from super markets and a suit need to attend a school dance from a clothing store in the years prior to his arrest for record theft. Young Scott Brown seemed headed for an entirely different kind of public record. Anyone who has heard any news coverage of this new book has probably only learned that as a kid Scott Brown was the victim of repeated sexual abuse and brutal beatings. However, while that naturally attracts the attention of the "headline hunting" media, that's only a small part of the book. This is a book of salvation and redemption. It's the story of how one young man's slide toward a life of crime was deflected back toward the main stream of society. Brown attended Tuff's University and played basketball there, which provided him with some free clothes. "I got shorts, T-shirts, and sweats. And that was what I wore, to class, to parties...I would do almost anything for extra cash." He recalls earning $10 for a two-minute job of cleaning up some drunk's vomit. "No job was too disgusting or too small." At the end of 1979, in the middle of his junior year, he went to the armory at "Camp Curtis Guild to officially register to join the Army National Guard." It was the beginning of his long service in the Army National Guard.Basketball is the love that allowed him to avoid becoming a juvenile delinquent. He recalls how as a child he used to take his basketball to bed with him. He was famous in Massachusetts for being "picked as `Cosmopolitan' magazine's `America's Sexiest Man' and was vaulted into the glamorous world of New York modeling at the height of the 1980's. When he returned to Tuffs he also signed up for the ROTC program. For a while he was in both the Guard and the ROTC at the same time. Despite the temptations of being a celebrity model at the time he avoided the downward spiral that often comes with the world of private clubbing and continued his education and military service. He also continued his modeling because it provided him the money he needed to attend Boston College Law School. Like another Massachusetts's politician with a new memoir, Governor Deval Patrick, Senator Brown's life story is amazing. So was Patricks. This is a well written, easy to read tale of personal trial and professional triumph. As Brown states in his lengthy acknowledgements and thank you section at the conclusion of his book, "As soon as I won the election in January 2010, publishers began calling, interested in a book. I had never considered such a project, but the more I thought about it, the more I wanted to tell my story, the good and the bad. My hope in sharing my life is that it will give hope to others, that other people who are struggling will be reminded that things can get better." Like his service as a Senator from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, this book serves a good purpose and it's nice Scott Brown took the time to see it completed. (The reader might wish to see the four photos this reviewer uploaded to the customer images of this book listing?)
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2011
I stayed up to 2 a.m. to finish this remarkable, heart-wrenching, and ultimately inspiring and uplifting book. My eyes teared up reading the story of Scott Brown as a six year old boy being beaten by his drunken father on the day that Scott's own half-sister was being born. Scott's "crime"? He had been told to wake up his stepdad so that he could go to the hospital. He was a boy who was shunted from home to home, traveling with his few meager possessions wrapped in a blanket. He was picked on and prayed upon. His clothes were too small, and he was desperately hungry. His mother worked multiple jobs, but never kept enough food in the fridge. He could have easily been a sullen bad-boy, but instead after a teacher, a coach, and a judge took a chance on him, he took it upon himself to turn his life around. And he never stopped. The last of his mother's husbands was a horribly abusive man, who terrorized the house and night after night threatened to break Scott's hands -- which would have rendered him unable to play basketball. But Scott answered every call to protect her and his sister, no matter what the risk to himself. Even when he reaches adulthood, the book never flags. He captures the world of New York in the early 80s and you feel like you are with him in the field or on night parachute jumps after he joins the military. When he builds a successful life for himself as an adult, it is a wonderful triumph and although I find most political campaign descriptions boring, I was on the edge of my seat for this one, because it was so improbable at every turn. This book really has something for everyone, a powerful and difficult boyhood, the magic of sports, the thrill of the chase in politics, and the pleasure of watching him win in life. I saw a couple of the TV interviews, and I don't think they begin to do justice to just how great and special this book is. Read it -- you'll come away with a renewed faith in the power of the human spirit.
43 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2011
Scott Brown's memoir takes the reader on a journey that starts with his turbulent childhood and ends with his successful run for senate. Despite experiencing a dysfunctional family, (his mother has married five times) angry step-fathers who beat him, and a camp counselor who sexually assaulted him in an empty bathroom stall, he rose above it all to become a successful basketball player, model and U.S. Senator. Amazingly, Brown wrote in his book that if he had the chance he would not change anything about his past, that his experiences shaped him into the hardworking person he is today; a man who is always looking for a way to serve the greater good.
If you're looking for an inspirational book, this is it. It is the classic story of a man rising out of the squalors of poverty to accomplish his dreams. It is also proof that a person can be successful without monetary inheritance or familial connections.

He does blow his own trumpet a little, but he also pokes a little fun at himself. For example, he admits that he's a horrible dresser and he recounts his wife's horrified reaction at the he way he dressed their young daughters one day.

Overall, an enjoyable book and worth the time it took to read it.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2011
I bought this book the day it was released and have long finished it. It was so interesting. It is hard to imagine how a person who had such a hard childhood could have possibly overcome all that to be a US Senator, when he could so easily have been a juvenile delinquent. Some key people along the way had faith in him, and gave him the support and the chances he needed. He has such strong character and learned some very valuable lessons while growing up. He is a remarkable husband and father, and really appreciates his wife and daughters. I believe we are so lucky to have such an honorable man in the Senate, knowing he is his own person and will do the right thing for the people who had faith in him, and voted him into office. Congratulations on a life well lived, Scott.
8 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 20, 2011
As a licensed marriage and family therapist, I spent years working with children from families like the one Scott Brown was born into. With most of these kids, it's about getting them to finish high school before they get arrested, killed, addicted, or pregnant. It's about trying to get parents who have serious issues of their own to do the right thing by their kids. It is phenomenally against the odds that Scott Brown became a US senator. He is very open about what he went through, doesn't seem to sugar-coat anything. One reviewer complained about the book having too much detail; I thought it had the right amount. I am amazed that he had time to write it, given how busy he must be getting started in the Senate. If you like rags to riches stories and if you like basketball, read this book.

I wrote the above in August 2011. Now in 2016 Scott has endorsed Donald Trump for president. How can someone who worked as hard as he did to rise from poverty and served in the military endorse a crooked, crude, draft dodger heir to a fortune like Donald Trump? Scott, I am so disappointed in you!
8 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2011
By no means is this a great literary work, however, that said, I found it to be a satisfying autobiography in the Horatio Alger vein and an easy read. Mr. Brown's life achievements to date are to be appreciated and he has recorded them in great detail and with pride, to which he is properly entitled.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 12, 2020
This autobiography of Scott Brown's is open, honest, heartbreaking, and inspiring. It is amazing what he has accomplished in his lifetime especially considering what a tough childhood he had. Definitely worth the read!!!
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2011
I received a Kindle for Christmas and the second book I downloaded was Scott Brown's book "Against all Odds". I had a very hard time putting it down. It is such a tale of survival - mostly through guts, talent and smarts. I loved the choices Scott made in his life and the priorities he set -education, financial independence, family loyalty. It was a pleasure to make his acquaintance and I look forward to watching him as my Senator. Oh yes, my husband thought I was just enjoying the novelty of the Kindle when I couldn't stop reading - but it was actually the story of Scott Brown's amazing life!
8 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Susan Jane
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Autobiography
Reviewed in Australia on March 25, 2017
Scott Brown's life story reads like a Hollywood script. From a difficult childhood to becoming a male model in New York to swiping the late Ted Kennedy's seat from under the noses of complacent Democrats and becoming a colonel in the National Gaurd; this is such a good read. Highly recommended to anyone interested in American politics or indeed, anyone interested in a good autobiography.