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10. Back from the Dead . By BILL WALTON. This inspiring memoir from sports and cultural icon Bill Walton recounts his devastating injuries and amazing recoveries, set in the context of his UCLA ...
Open: An Autobiography. In 1992, at 22 years old, Agassi won the first of his eight Grand Slams. At the 1996 Olympics, he won the gold medal. In 1999, he was number one in tennis.
41-Love: A Memoir. This unconventional sports memoir features writer Scarlett Thomas deciding to take up tennis at the age of 41. Soon, she finds herself addicted to the competition of the sport ...
Tony Greig: Love, War and Cricket - A Family Memoir: Tony Greig: Joyce Greig and Mark Greig 2014: Playing It My Way: Sachin Tendulkar: Sachin Tendulkar with Boria Majumdar: 2014: KP: The Autobiography: Kevin Pietersen: Kevin Pietersen with David Walsh: 2014: Rhino: Ryan Harris: Ryan Harris with Stephen Gray and Jason Phelan 2014: Cricket As I ...
Over the Top & Back: 2015 Sebastian Bach: 18 & Life on Skid Row: 2016 Thomas Dolby: The Speed of Sound: 2016 Lita Ford: Living Like a Runaway: 2016 Grace Jones: I'll Never Write My Memoirs: 2016 Toni Tennille: TT: a Memoir, AKA The Captain & I: 2016 Charlie Daniels: Never Look At the Empty Seats: 2017 Samantha Fox: Forever, AKA A Fox for All ...
Selected from the cream of the sports journalism crop, nearly every guest editor has had at least one story published in a previous or later edition of the book. The only exceptions are John Feinstein, and Dick Schaap (whose work appeared twice in the Best American Sports Writing of the Century anthology). [1] [2]
In her first memoir, the tennis champion chronicles her experience as one of the best female athletes in the world, boasting six years as the top-ranked woman in the world, 20 Wimbledon ...
Despite controversy surrounding Agassi's admission to using methamphetamine in 1997, [5] [6] the book reached No. 1 on the New York Times Best Seller list [7] and was met with critical acclaim, [8] [9] [10] with New York Times writer Sam Tanenhaus claiming that Open "is not just a first-rate sports memoir but a genuine bildungsroman, darkly funny yet also anguished and soulful".