Since its inception in 1915, the Best American series has become the premier annual showcase for the country's finest short fiction and nonfiction. For each volume, a series editor reads pieces from hundreds of periodicals, then selects between fifty and a hundred outstanding works. That selection is pared down to twenty or so very best pieces by a guest editor who is widely recognized as a leading writer in his or her field. This unique system has helped make the Best American series the most respected -- and most popular -- of its kind. "Cracker-jack writing from some of the country's best-known sports journalists." -- Publishers Weekly With Richard Ben Cramer at the helm, this year's selections embrace the world of sports in all its drama, humanity, and excitement, from swimming the Arctic Ocean to high school football. Today's foremost journalists shed light on Mia Hamm, Amare Stoudemire, and on sports' underbelly as a professional baseball team scalps its own tickets and as women single-mindedly pursue million-dollar athletes. We witness the World Taxidermy Championships, the final days of the Michael Jordan Wizards, and much more.
You don't have to be a sports fan to enjoy The Best American Sport Writing 2004. I don't have a lot of interest in, much less passion for, running. Bicycling and swimming, too, seem sensible and healthy activities, but not all that compelling. It stands against reason, then, that the stories I liked the most in this book had to do with running, bicycling, and swimming. Weird that. Houghton-Mifflin has been issuing Best of American Sports Writing for years, rotating editors annually. This edition's editor is Richard Ben Cramer, who gives this insight into the selection process - "I tend to like stories that treat a whole life, or at least make a connection between sports and the rest of life." Most of the twenty-six examples here, culled from magazines, newspapers, and web sites, do just that. They run the gamut of sports related topics; baseball - 6 stories, basketball - 5, football -3, running -3, fishing -2, and one each on bicycling, swimming, soccer, horse racing, airplane racing, taxidermy, sports groupies, and other (A personal memoir of sorts by Sports Illustrated's Rick Telander.) A little surprisingly there are no stories on hockey, hunting, boxing, or golf. Cramer also slights professional football. The football related entries include Charles Stowers' (Dallas Observer) story about 6-man football leagues in Texas high schools, Charles Pierce's (Sports Illustrated) look back at the NFL decision to play games the Sunday after the John Kennedy assassination, and Ira Berkow's (New York Times) short profile of St. John's University's coach John Galiardi. Included are long articles on basketball's Yao Ming, Amare Stoudemire, and Michael Jordan's last season of professional basketball. Maybe the selections would have made more sense to me if I had more interest in basketball and less in football. In any event, the strength of this book lies elsewhere. Steve Friedman's `The Race of Truth' (Bicycling) is an engrossing story of the troubled speed-racer Graeme Obree. Lynne Cox's `Swimming to Antartica (The New Yorker) is the only entry from a non-professional writer. Cox recounts, in fascinating detail, the preparations and sacrifices she underwent to attempt to swim in the near-freezing waters of Antartica. Stephen Rodricks's appropriately titled `A Long Strange Trip' (Runner's World) profiles Iranian Reza Baluchi, a man who, Forrest Gump-like, is running across the world in the name of peace. Rodrick catches him outside of Hicks Junction, Arkansas. The most harrowing story is Michael Hall's sensitive portrait of Burundi-born Gilbert Tuhabonye in `Running for His Life' (Texas Monthly), which details Tuhabonye's violent youth - beaten, burned, and left for dead in his Hutu versus Tutsi homeland - and his new life as a running coach in Texas. Incidentally, the stories in Best... 2004 were all written in the calendar year of 2003. Series editor Glenn Stout includes a selection of Notable Sports Writing of 2003, a list of
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