DOUGLAS CENTURY is the author, with Rick Cowan, of The New York
Times best seller
and Edgar Award-winner Takedown- The Fall of the Last Mafi a
Empire. Publications
he has written for include The New York Times, Details, Rolling
Stone, and The Guardian.
He lives in New York City.
“An excellent story of a man and his times. And proof positive that
time does not relinquish its hold over men or monuments. In a sport
devoted to fashioning halos for its superstars, Ross wore a special
nimbus, and this book properly fi ts him for that.”
—Bert Randolph Sugar, The New York Times Book Review
“Will a better book on the fighter ever be written? I have to doubt
it. The research is impressive yet unostentatious. The prose is
trim and elegant, and lands its emotional blows with very effective
precision . . . Century doesn’t waste a single paragraph.”
—Scott McLemee, Newsday
“Barney Ross’s life is a curious mix: a boxer with a religious
streak who was haunted by the death of his own dad. Douglas Century
has managed to deal with all of Ross’s contradictions and
mysteries, when Jewish fighters were like gods of the ghetto. This
is a deeply moving book.”
—Jerome Charyn, author of Savage Shorthand: The Life and Death of
Isaac Babel
“Fascinating . . . A powerful account of the career of ‘one of the
two greatest Jewish boxers of the twentieth century.’”
—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“If there is still a queue of writers mining the Depression Era for
racehorses or prizefighters with inspirational stories that will
resonate with today’s readers, Douglas Century has beaten them to
the punch . . . Ross’s consummate boxing skills and toughness made
him one of the last heirs to a largely untold tradition of
formidable Jewish pugilists.”
—Kirkus Reviews
"An excellent story of a man and his times. And proof positive that
time does not relinquish its hold over men or monuments. In a sport
devoted to fashioning halos for its superstars, Ross wore a special
nimbus, and this book properly fi ts him for that."
-Bert Randolph Sugar, The New York Times Book Review
"Will a better book on the fighter ever be written? I have to doubt
it. The research is impressive yet unostentatious. The prose is
trim and elegant, and lands its emotional blows with very effective
precision . . . Century doesn't waste a single paragraph."
-Scott McLemee, Newsday
"Barney Ross's life is a curious mix: a boxer with a religious
streak who was haunted by the death of his own dad. Douglas Century
has managed to deal with all of Ross's contradictions and
mysteries, when Jewish fighters were like gods of the ghetto. This
is a deeply moving book."
-Jerome Charyn, author of Savage Shorthand: The Life and Death
of Isaac Babel
"Fascinating . . . A powerful account of the career of 'one of the
two greatest Jewish boxers of the twentieth century.'"
-Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"If there is still a queue of writers mining the Depression Era for
racehorses or prizefighters with inspirational stories that will
resonate with today's readers, Douglas Century has beaten them to
the punch . . . Ross's consummate boxing skills and toughness made
him one of the last heirs to a largely untold tradition of
formidable Jewish pugilists."
-Kirkus Reviews
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