Ben Mathis-Lilley is a senior writer for Slate.com, where he writes blog posts, columns, and feature stories about news, politics, and sports. He worked previously at New York magazine and, briefly but gloriously, as the editor of BuzzFeed's sports section. He lives in New Jersey.
"Surprisingly funny and filled with heart, this isn't just a
play-by-play recap of a college-football season; rather, it's an
insightful exploration of fandom and why 'there is no fully
explainable reason to care what happens in a game. . . but there is
nothing more important.' While a basic knowledge of football will
help, this book will appeal to devoted fans of just about
anything."--Booklist
Ben Mathis-Lilley's thrilling account of one very magical college
football season puts you on the sidelines, in the trenches, and
inside the coaches' heads to tell a bigger story about what it
really takes to win--in sport and in life, too.--Jonathan Cohn,
senior correspondent at HuffPost and author of The Ten Year War
College football is for rabidly delusional true believers, mass
hallucinators, duped marks, and complete lunatics. Which is to say,
it's the truest American sport there is. The Hot Seat is funny,
passionate, wry, and observant, and it has more empathy than any
college football fan I've ever met--and I say that as a dedicated
member of that tribe myself. If you want to make sense of this
ridiculous, thrilling sport and the country that can't stop
watching it--this is where you should start. But make sure to paint
your face first.--Will Leitch, author of How Lucky and God Save The
Fan
Mathis-Lilley has written a rip-roaringly funny book about the
absurdity that is college football, making the whole enterprise
accessible and wildly interesting even to people who couldn't
possibly care about whether Jim Harbaugh stays in Ann Arbor for
another couple of years. These are stories ostensibly about the
game and the people who keep it going, but they're also about how
an academic extracurricular activity became a national obsession
and why. Anyone who cares deeply about anything that seems
inconsequential can see themselves in this book.--Joel Anderson,
Slate
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