Best Sports Writing

In the early 1970s, an ex-professional pitcher for the Milwaukee Braves named Pat Jordan emerged as one of the leading young sportswriters of his generation. He was unique because unlike the other scribes he had played the game and knew it from the inside. Now another former minor league pitcher and author of over 30 books named Steven Travers, who grew up reading Jordan, has compiled a list of the greatest sports articles and books of all time.



These feature along with several books and articles by Jordan some of the greatest scribes in the pantheon, including but not limited to Ernest Thayer, Jack London, Heywood Broun, H.L. Mencken, Grantland Rice, Ring Lardner, Paul Gallico, Jimmy Cannon, Red Smith, A.J. Liebling, Jimmy Breslin, John Updike, Al Stump, James Baldwin, Leonard Koppett, George Plimpton, Gay Talese, John Underwood, Roger Angell, Jim Murray, Hunter S. Thompson, Philip Roth, Norman Mailer, Tom Boswell, Budd Schulberg, Frank Deford, Richard Ben Cramer, Rick Reilly, Mike Royko, Maury Allen, Willian Nack, Michael Lewis, Bruce Jenkins, Bernard Malamud, Lawrence S. Ritter, Dick Schaap, Jim Bouton, Roger Kahn, Dan Jenkins, Peter Gent, W.P. Kinsella, John Feinstein, Buzz Bissinger, David Halberstam, Tom Wolfe, and David Maraniss, among many others; including his friend Bill "Spaceman" Lee, who wrote the foreword and whose book The Wrong Stuff as well as Tom Bonk's L.A. Times feature about the Spaceman, are featured.



This book includes boxing articles in the golden age of the sport, and of course baseball poetry when the game reigned supreme, as well as great football writing plus other sports and human interest features, both funny and sad. The author also includes personal anecdotes when appropriate; writers or subjects he personally knew or had association with, much of which adds to the in-depth experience of the writer's life.


Read about the racism experienced by Jack Johnson; the formation of Notre Dame's football legend; larger than life portraits of Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio and Tom Seaver; the minor league life; the tell-all of Jim Bouton's Ball Four; the Louvre quality of Lawrence Ritter's The Glory of Their Times; the pathos of Roger Kahn's Brooklyn Dodgers' saga; the hilarity of Bill Lee; the magic of W.P. Kinsella; even the world of college football from Tom Wolfe's perspective.


It's all here. Enjoy.

"1141238281"
Best Sports Writing

In the early 1970s, an ex-professional pitcher for the Milwaukee Braves named Pat Jordan emerged as one of the leading young sportswriters of his generation. He was unique because unlike the other scribes he had played the game and knew it from the inside. Now another former minor league pitcher and author of over 30 books named Steven Travers, who grew up reading Jordan, has compiled a list of the greatest sports articles and books of all time.



These feature along with several books and articles by Jordan some of the greatest scribes in the pantheon, including but not limited to Ernest Thayer, Jack London, Heywood Broun, H.L. Mencken, Grantland Rice, Ring Lardner, Paul Gallico, Jimmy Cannon, Red Smith, A.J. Liebling, Jimmy Breslin, John Updike, Al Stump, James Baldwin, Leonard Koppett, George Plimpton, Gay Talese, John Underwood, Roger Angell, Jim Murray, Hunter S. Thompson, Philip Roth, Norman Mailer, Tom Boswell, Budd Schulberg, Frank Deford, Richard Ben Cramer, Rick Reilly, Mike Royko, Maury Allen, Willian Nack, Michael Lewis, Bruce Jenkins, Bernard Malamud, Lawrence S. Ritter, Dick Schaap, Jim Bouton, Roger Kahn, Dan Jenkins, Peter Gent, W.P. Kinsella, John Feinstein, Buzz Bissinger, David Halberstam, Tom Wolfe, and David Maraniss, among many others; including his friend Bill "Spaceman" Lee, who wrote the foreword and whose book The Wrong Stuff as well as Tom Bonk's L.A. Times feature about the Spaceman, are featured.



This book includes boxing articles in the golden age of the sport, and of course baseball poetry when the game reigned supreme, as well as great football writing plus other sports and human interest features, both funny and sad. The author also includes personal anecdotes when appropriate; writers or subjects he personally knew or had association with, much of which adds to the in-depth experience of the writer's life.


Read about the racism experienced by Jack Johnson; the formation of Notre Dame's football legend; larger than life portraits of Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio and Tom Seaver; the minor league life; the tell-all of Jim Bouton's Ball Four; the Louvre quality of Lawrence Ritter's The Glory of Their Times; the pathos of Roger Kahn's Brooklyn Dodgers' saga; the hilarity of Bill Lee; the magic of W.P. Kinsella; even the world of college football from Tom Wolfe's perspective.


It's all here. Enjoy.

9.99 In Stock
Best Sports Writing

Best Sports Writing

by Steven Travers
Best Sports Writing

Best Sports Writing

by Steven Travers

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Overview

In the early 1970s, an ex-professional pitcher for the Milwaukee Braves named Pat Jordan emerged as one of the leading young sportswriters of his generation. He was unique because unlike the other scribes he had played the game and knew it from the inside. Now another former minor league pitcher and author of over 30 books named Steven Travers, who grew up reading Jordan, has compiled a list of the greatest sports articles and books of all time.



These feature along with several books and articles by Jordan some of the greatest scribes in the pantheon, including but not limited to Ernest Thayer, Jack London, Heywood Broun, H.L. Mencken, Grantland Rice, Ring Lardner, Paul Gallico, Jimmy Cannon, Red Smith, A.J. Liebling, Jimmy Breslin, John Updike, Al Stump, James Baldwin, Leonard Koppett, George Plimpton, Gay Talese, John Underwood, Roger Angell, Jim Murray, Hunter S. Thompson, Philip Roth, Norman Mailer, Tom Boswell, Budd Schulberg, Frank Deford, Richard Ben Cramer, Rick Reilly, Mike Royko, Maury Allen, Willian Nack, Michael Lewis, Bruce Jenkins, Bernard Malamud, Lawrence S. Ritter, Dick Schaap, Jim Bouton, Roger Kahn, Dan Jenkins, Peter Gent, W.P. Kinsella, John Feinstein, Buzz Bissinger, David Halberstam, Tom Wolfe, and David Maraniss, among many others; including his friend Bill "Spaceman" Lee, who wrote the foreword and whose book The Wrong Stuff as well as Tom Bonk's L.A. Times feature about the Spaceman, are featured.



This book includes boxing articles in the golden age of the sport, and of course baseball poetry when the game reigned supreme, as well as great football writing plus other sports and human interest features, both funny and sad. The author also includes personal anecdotes when appropriate; writers or subjects he personally knew or had association with, much of which adds to the in-depth experience of the writer's life.


Read about the racism experienced by Jack Johnson; the formation of Notre Dame's football legend; larger than life portraits of Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio and Tom Seaver; the minor league life; the tell-all of Jim Bouton's Ball Four; the Louvre quality of Lawrence Ritter's The Glory of Their Times; the pathos of Roger Kahn's Brooklyn Dodgers' saga; the hilarity of Bill Lee; the magic of W.P. Kinsella; even the world of college football from Tom Wolfe's perspective.


It's all here. Enjoy.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940160888163
Publisher: Stillwater River Publications
Publication date: 03/17/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Steven Travers is a former screenwriter who has authored 33 books. Barry Bonds: Baseball’s Superman, was a best seller in 2002 and finalist for a Casey Award for Best Baseball Book of the Year. One Night, Two Teams: Alabama vs. USC and the Game That Changed a Nation (2007) was also a best seller and finalist for PNBA Book of the Year. It is currently under development as a Hollywood motion picture (directed by Carl Weathers, featuring Jeff Daniels as Paul “Bear” Bryant), and was the subject of three documentaries: Tackling Segregation (CBS/College Sports TV, 2006); Breaking the Huddle (HBO, 2008); and Against the Tide (narrated by Tom Selleck, Showtime, 2013). Coppola’s Monster Film: The Making of Apocalypse Now (2016) is the subject of numerous YouTube.com analyses of the film. His screenplay The Lost Battalion made it to the quarterfinals of the Beverly Hills Fiction & Screenplay Contest and was produced into a 2002 film.


Working in Hollywood in the 1990s, Travers wrote 17 screenplays and stageplays. Once He Was an Angel made the quarterfinals of the Beverly Hills Fiction and Screenplay contest, and was bought by a producing team led by Frank Capra, Jr., son of the famed It’s a Wonderful Life director. The Lost Battalion was produced in 2002. He wrote a biographical stageplay of his USC experiences, The Cool of the Evening, and one-man stageplays based on his script about Bo Belinsky, and another based on his good friend Bill “Spaceman” Lee.


He has been a sports columnist for StreetZebra magazine in Los Angeles and with the San Francisco Examiner. Travers has also written for the L.A. Times, the L.A. Daily News, Gentry magazine, and MichaelSavage.com, among numerous other publications and web sites.


Prior to finding his calling as a writer, Travers was a graduate assistant baseball coach at USC, the University of California-Berkeley, and managed a team in Europe. He then worked as an investment banker on Wall Street, was a political consultant/speechwriter, and a sports agent. He lives in California and has one daughter, Elizabeth. He can be reached at or on Twitter @STWRITES.

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