Synopses & Reviews
John Schulian, a much-honored sportswriter for nearly forty years, takes us back to a time when our greatest athletes stood before us as human beings, not remote gods. In this compelling collection, Schulian paints prose portraits to remind fans of what todays cloistered stars wont share with them.
Here, Willie Mays remembers how to smile in dreaded retirement; Muhammad Ali muses about a world that was once his. For every moment of triumph—Joe Montana in the Super Bowl, Marvelous Marvin Hagler over Thomas Hearns—there is another filled with the heartache that Pete Maravich felt when he hung up his basketball shoes.
The result is a book guaranteed to stir memories for the generation that was—and to leave subsequent generations wishing they had it so good.
Review
“John Schulian ranks high among the best sports journalists of our time. His stories are clean and muscular and filled with swift, poetic turns. . . . Ive often wondered if the subjects of his stories realized how privileged they were to have him telling their tales. Great ballplayers come and go, but there has been only one Schulian.”—John Ed Bradley, author of It Never Rains in Tiger Stadium Alan Moores - Booklist
Review
“This generous, big-hearted collection comes at a perfect time. Here is a reminder of what athletes were like before they were made virtual, hypothetical, or imagined or projected as probabilities in a fantasy game. They werent always heroes. But Schulian made them all human.”—Mark Kriegel, author of Namath and Pistol John Ed Bradley
Review
“Its easy to forget how wonderful it is to be a sports fan. Remind yourself. Read this book.”—Joe Posnanski, author of The Soul of Baseball and The Machine Mark Kriegel
Review
"These pieces, and Schulian's longer profiles written for other publications around that time—such as a fine portrait of the cerebral but hard-hitting Bears safety Gary Fencik, for GQ—have traveled well and together capture an era ever worth remembering."—Alan Moores, Booklist NPR's Only a Game
Review
"If today's center fielders and point guards seem like lesser figures than men like Maravich and Charleston, that's primarily because they are so much more heavily covered but also because so much of that coverage is needlessly cruel. Without falsely inflating them or hiding their weaknesses, Mr. Schulian made one generation of athletes worthy subjects of wonder. Had Hollywood not called, you suspect, he'd have done the same for another."—Tim Marchman, Wall Street Journal Tim Marchman
Review
"Whether discoursing on boxing, horse racing, tennis players or Olympic swimmers, John Schulian delivers tales replete with the elements that make fiction come alive. Readers of a certain age will experience a walk down memory lane and others will have the pleasure of meeting some of the greatest, most interesting and human sports figures they have never heard of."—Phyllis Hanlon, New York Journal of Books Wall Street Journal
Review
"Like a pinch hitter who steps to the plate at a crucial point in the game, John Schulian rises magnificently to the occasion. . . . These essays are pungent and heartfelt and knowing. They come at you straight and strong."—Julia Keller, Chicago Tribune Phyllis Hanlon - New York Journal of Books
Review
"Whichever way you take the title, the book is full of fine writing. Schulian deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as some of his heroes, including the aforementioned Smith and Heinz. Thanks to University of Nebraska Press for collecting this work."—NPR's Only a Game Julia Keller - Chicago Tribune
Review
"Looking back through the years in sports reveals much about the culture and society in which we live. It's hard to imagine Babe Ruth getting away with his trysts in a TMZ society. Or Wilt Chamberlain saying whatever comes into his head on Twitter. This is why John Schulian's recent book, Sometimes They Even Shook Your Hand, is an intriguing look back at a time when athletes behaved a lot differently with their fan base."—Krystina Lucido, PressBox Alan Moores - Booklist
About the Author
John Schulians work has been included in Best American Sports Writing and Sports Illustrateds Fifty Years of Great Writing. His many books include The John Lardner Reader and Twilight of the Long-Ball Gods: Dispatches from the Disappearing Heart of Baseball, both available in Bison Books editions. William Nack is the author of Secretariat: The Making of a Champion and Ruffian: A Racetrack Romance.