Sports Books
Related Subjects: Blood Bowl Car Wars College Football Marathon Game, The En Garde Lunker Lake Canadian City Challenge, The
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Dave and Jamie really came up with somethingReview Date: 2004-07-04
awsomeReview Date: 2002-11-03
but I lost them both in a house fire. I have always wished to own the entire series. But I would be happy with one for the time being. Info on where to get any would be great.
The Rest Were Released In The UKReview Date: 2002-06-09
Where Can I Get The Rest!!!!!!!!!!Review Date: 2002-05-13
Three thumbs up!Review Date: 2000-01-12
Collectible price: $48.00

Great Read for Adventure LoversReview Date: 2008-05-19
We swam the Grand CanyonReview Date: 2006-08-18
High AdventureReview Date: 2006-06-22
Fun Read Fun Trip Dangerous YESReview Date: 2006-03-14
Ridiculous & charmingReview Date: 2004-04-20
I enjoyed this book a lot, and admired the author's courage at least as often as I laughed out loud at his actions.

Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $18.00

If I didn't love him then, I sure do now !Review Date: 2006-02-25
Ted Williams, Warts and AllReview Date: 2005-11-29
Contradiction: Williams respected authority (never argued with umpires and liked the military life), but he refused to conform to societal customs, e.g. wearing a necktie.
Contradiction: He was an obsessive perfectionist, but often half-hearted on defense or while running the bases.
Contradiction: He was a self-centered loner, but unfailingly generous toward charities.
Contradiction: He resented the Boston sports press, but wanted no publicity for his unselfish work for the Jimmy Fund.
Contradiction: He came from poverty, was poorly educated, yet became a dyed-in-the-wool Republican and establishmentarian.
One thing Ted never lost was his potty-mouth, which he used to rail against the "knights of the keyboard," Boston's habitually self-righteous sports reporters who attacked him not only for his lackadaisical defensive habits but even for his failure to call his mother on holidays (she was a Salvation Army worker who wasn't home, anyway) or stay home for his daughter's birth (she was born two months prematurely, but he was supposed to have known it would happen). The more Ted cursed at his enemies in the press, the more they'd dig up irrelevant dirt to throw at him. Things never improved. He also refused to tip his cap for the fans after a home run, resentful of earlier booing.
So why did Ted Williams enjoy such a renaissance in public aspect, especially in Boston? It wasn't because he changed as a person. On the contrary, as Cramer makes clear, his later life (with his life partner, Louise, whom he settled down with after three unsuccessful marriages), was filled with the same profanity, the same volatile temper, the same need to be right all the time that the younger Ted Williams exhibited.
What happened, apparently, was that the public was no longer exposed to the constant friction between Ted and the press, and so remembered only the good stuff: his .406 batting average in 1941, his home run that decided the All-Star game that year, and the home run in his last at bat in 1960, all of which were replayed via TV highlights regularly. John Updike's dissertation on the 1960 home run helped, too.
Cramer makes us understand Ted Williams. Like Ty Cobb, Babe Ruth, Pete Rose and Joe DiMaggio, he was no scholar. Also like them, he was able to cultivate a specific skill set on the baseball diamond. He became (arguably) the greatest hitter who ever lived. Still, his lack of education and lonely childhood left vacuums in his life...he compensated for the first by having to be right all the time, and for the second by finally admitting to Cramer, "I was a terrible husband and father."
In the interest of full disclosure, the present writer met Ted Williams at two Red Sox fantasy camps.
Teddy Ballgame At His FinestReview Date: 2005-01-02
Mr. Cramer does a masterful job weaving this interesting portrayal. This book is rather brief compared to the DiMaggio biography; however, it has more "life." The bulk of this work concentrates upon an interview that took place in 1986. It is written in such a way that the author fades into the background. In a strange sense, the reader feels present. As if we are sitting with Mr. Williams in his living room, and spellbound to imagine what will come next. The sheer force of his personality makes this a very entertaining and informative read.
Compared to the modern day ballplayer, Mr. Williams was indeed a rare bird. He had interesting and intriguing opinions about hitting, fishing, flying jet planes, marriage, lemonade, fickle fans, and the traffic patterns of the Florida Keys. ;-) He is both arrogant and enchanting, if one can imagine such a thing. Mr. Cramer draws out Williams in a way that writers of his own era failed to do. He showed him respect and deference, but like so many of the fish that Williams loved to catch, didn't allow him off the hook on tough subjects. In a way, this interview perhaps was a cathartic exercise for Mr. Williams.
The unfortunate circumstances that surrounded his death made this book quite pertinent. What do we think of him now? The best hitter to ever live, a true American patriot, a lover of the great outdoors, and a man who defined life in his own strike zone.
Thank you for the opportunity to review this excellent work by Mr. Cramer.
Truly a work of art!Review Date: 2004-04-10
Baseball's version of "The Lion In Winter"Review Date: 2005-03-01
He was the eternal paradox, the New England sports hero with the "When Guns Are Outlawed, Only Outlaws Will Have Guns" bumper sticker on his pick-up truck, the all-time All-Star outfielder who practiced his swing while playing defense, the surly bane to those in the sports press charged with selling his image to the Boston public, and the eternal cynic who could never fully give himself to the public's adoration because he would always hear the 2 or 3 boos among the thousands of cheers his very presence on the field generated.
This book does a fine job of encapsulating the highlights of Williams' career, covered sparingly among a (then) current interview of the man as living legend approaching his 70's. But the real joy and success of the book is the author's capturing the essence of the magnitude of Williams to the point that you can't possibly help but feel that you are listening to the man thunder away in your own living room, rather than from a far-off house in the Florida Keys (or from the more appropriate peak of Mount Olympus). Most enjoyable to me is the author's penchant FOR PRINTING WILLIAMS' QUOTES IN ALL CAPS (wherein I can't help but read them aloud -and at suitable volume- to my fiancee', much to her dismay).
We have a suitable account of Williams' life after his time as an active player and manager, but before his health began to rapidly deteriorate. It is a full portrait, balancing the more infamous qualities of the man with those that Williams fiercely guarded during his lifetime; that he was, beneath the callous exterior, as warm and giving a soul that baseball would be far more fortunate than it deserves to have as an ambassador today.
It's a joy to read, seemingly almost an afterthought in its brevity, but when considered that it was only ever supposed to be an article for Esquire magazine, it surely ranks among the finest sports writing of all time.

Used price: $3.07
Collectible price: $14.95

Great for the little race car fan!Review Date: 2008-07-01
Helping my preschooler learn to readReview Date: 2008-01-31
The illustrations keep us busy too. He picks up on small details in the pictures and tells me stories about the drivers, especially the bad sport penguin.
Our son loves this book!!Review Date: 2007-11-06
childrens bookReview Date: 2007-08-24
Wheels on the race carReview Date: 2007-08-08


Great giftReview Date: 2008-10-28
When I Grow Up I Want to be a Hockey StarReview Date: 2008-03-14
Get Em Started EarlyReview Date: 2007-12-24
When I Grow Up I'm Going to be a Hockiey StarReview Date: 2007-04-03
Thank you for your prompt service and great selections.
Jan
For The Kid Who Dreams HockeyReview Date: 2007-02-11

Used price: $6.30

Lovely and sexy womenReview Date: 1999-12-15
very beautifulReview Date: 2000-02-28
Titanic, muscular femininity!Review Date: 2001-12-10
None of "the women" here look like men in drag. All have elements of conventional femininity: stunning faces, luxurious coiffures, slender waists, and curvaceous hips. Some model seductive lingerie. But the also have massive biceps, shoulders, and backs, as well as hard, flat, strapping chests with virtually no bosom. (As part of their exercise regiment and diet, FBBs tend to increase their chest size while dramatically losing breast mass.)
So what are "the women": half man/half woman monsters or a new kind of "muscular femininity"--elements of traditional womanhood combined with a new look of strength and power? For me, it's a "new femininity." The elements of traditional womanhood are so seductively powerful in these women that I could never call them masculine. The best description for them is "titanic." The Titans in Greek mythology were a race of massively muscular men and women--the women far more muscular than an ordinary man. Yet the Titan women still had al the traditional elements of womanhood at the same time. And that's "the women."
Two concluding observations from reading this book. First, what we look for in a woman's body depends on what we expect from them. If we expect clinging fragility, we look for a weak, delicate body. But in the age of Xenia, "muscular femininity" no longer sounds like an oxymoron. Second, if a man regards these women as freaks, it may be because he is encountering (for the first time, perhaps) a woman who is more muscular than he, threatening his sense of masculinity. As a small, quite unmuscular man, I long ago realized that not all men are muscular, nor all women weak. Ladies such as "the women" teach us that muscle alone does not define either masculinity or femininity, and they make us more accepting of people who don't meet traditional stereotypes of womanhood or manhood.
In conclusion, this book is a MUST for any man (like me) who admires and is attracted to very strong, muscular, yet feminine women. People with negative stereotypes of FBBs will have them challenged. The photos themselves are creative, artistic, dramatic, and seductive.
My favorite photo: the cover shot of the massive Nikki Fuller in a perfect combination of demure femininity and regal muscularity. A true Amazon Queen!
Nice - but not great.Review Date: 2001-12-28
Denise Rutowski, for example, is wonderfull, alluring and i adore her. This one pic (scroll a little more higher) where you only can see her right side (she puts her arms on a chair and looks to it), is the best pic i ever have seen. A wonderfull face, great hands and hair and excelent biceps/triceps. Fantastic.
Magnificent & inspiringReview Date: 2003-02-08

Used price: $0.44

makes me wanna wrassleReview Date: 2003-05-15
super bookReview Date: 2003-05-12
Take a look at 2002Review Date: 2004-03-20
BRILLIANT FANTASTICReview Date: 2003-05-15
THIS IS A DEFINITE BUY FOR ANYONE WHO CALLS THEMSELVES A WRESTLING FAN.
Yearbook of the year!!! A must-buy for wrestling fans!!Review Date: 2003-05-13
Well written, well researched, it's full of facts and behind the scenes dope that are presented in a witty and amazingly insightful manner.
I'd never heard of Mr.McAvennie before but he's a sports writer to watch out for- more like this please!
Matched with literally hundreds of great photos, this is a must for anyone who's got the slightest interest in WWE.

Used price: $8.35

The Ultimate ReferenceReview Date: 2002-04-06
It's not only great man-to-man advice in this book though. The beautiful, and very successful Monica Brant offers advice from a woman's perspective, which is of use to both male and female readers. Also, the people behind the cameras talk about what they look for in a model in the 'Lessons From The Other Side' section. All invaluable knowledge. The structure of the text is such that you can read from cover to cover, but also go straight to a particular topic and still have all the information you need.
In short, if you're serious about a career as a fitness model, or just curious about what such a job would involve, then you cannot afford to pass up on this book. Agencies, self-promotion, tricks of the trade, training programs, possible employers, useful resources and even haircuts are all covered. I've found this book an exceptional resource, and my thanks to Clark Bartram for writing it.
Clark is awesomeReview Date: 2002-03-09
Totally Awesome!!Review Date: 2002-03-07
Get This Book!Review Date: 2002-03-07
Now YOU'VE got a friend in the business!Review Date: 2002-03-11
Clark Bartram's own accounts of his success are honest, candid, and loaded with advice and encouragement for aspiring fitness models - guys and girls. You really feel like he's opening up and telling you everything you need to know. Plus, a lot of his influential friends - agents, photographers, and magazine editors - have contributed chapters explaining the business from every angle.
You come away learning that fitness modeling isn't just about being in tremendous shape, it's about being a shrewd businessperson with a positive attitude. You really learn what it takes - and as a bonus you get simple but effective advice on training and nutrition to keep in top shape all year long.
If you decide you want to be a fitness model after reading this book, you'll feel like you have some real friends in the industry. If you call anyone mentioned in the book and tell them that you read it, I think they'd give you a real shot if you're serious. If you decide you don't want to be a fitness model after reading this book, you'll still have a positive guide with powerful advice you can use to look, feel, and be your very best.

Used price: $3.48

very easy to read and under standReview Date: 2007-03-26
2006 Catalog of FirearmsReview Date: 2007-01-10
Firearms CollectorReview Date: 2007-01-10
The one to ownReview Date: 2007-01-04
price guideReview Date: 2006-11-03

Used price: $14.93

Excellent!Review Date: 2002-01-21
Improve Your Results With Aggrssive Whitetail HuntingReview Date: 2000-06-15
Greg Miller is a true outdoorsman who hunts on public land and small farms in Wisconsin. His helpful tips, especially on hunting rublines are sure to make you a better hunter. As someone who must hunt heavily pressured public land I figured I would have to use Aggressvie Whitetail strategies to be successful. I applied the lessons learned in this book and bagged a nice eight point buck on public land.
If your a begginer, or someone who wants to bag a bigger buck this is the book for you.
Aggressive Whitetail HuntingReview Date: 2001-08-06
Aggressive Whitetail HuntingReview Date: 1999-12-31
Very detailed and informative!!Review Date: 1999-09-06
Related Subjects: Blood Bowl Car Wars College Football Marathon Game, The En Garde Lunker Lake Canadian City Challenge, The
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