Dave Kindred has been a columnist for the Louisville Courier-Journal, the Washington Post, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The National Sports Daily, Sporting News, and Golf Digest. Kindred is the author of several books including Heroes, Fools and Other Dreamers: A Sportswriter's Gallery of Extraordinary People, Around the World in 18 Holes, Morning Miracle: Inside the Washington Post The Fight to Keep a Great Newspaper Alive, and Sound and Fury: Two Powerful Lives, One Fateful Friendship.Kindred is one of only two writers who have earned sportswriting's three highest honours: the Red Smith Award, the PEN America ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing, and the Dan Jenkins Medal for Excellence in Sportswriting. He also has won the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame's Curt Gowdy Award (for outstanding media contributions) as well as a National Headliner award for general-interest columns. He is a member of The National Sports Media Hall of Fame. He lives in Illinois.
A love letter. . . Kindred writes with an impressive combination of
journalistic detachment and grandfatherly love . . .He approaches a
difficult story with love and curiosity rather than
sentimentality.--Kirkus Reviews
Dave Kindred's Leave Out the Tragic Parts is a searing, terrifying,
and brilliantly written book that, when I began reading one night,
I couldn't put down. As a tireless researcher devoted to finding
and writing the unflinching truth about his beloved grandson,
Kindred brings us into a fascinating, foreign world. In his
remarkable journey, he explores and communicates the bafflement,
desperation, and pain experienced by anyone who loves a person with
addiction, and he reminds us that reading others' stories can lead
to understanding, compassion, and healing. Leave Out the Tragic
Parts is a godsend for every grandparent, parent, friend, spouse,
and child who loves a person with addiction. It is testament to the
power of love. I believe that the greatest art can come from the
greatest pain and love, and this book is pure art.--David Sheff,
New York Times-bestselling author of Beautiful Boy
Keening was the sound that confronted me on the other end of the
line when Dave Kindred called to say his grandson Jared had been
found dead of an overdose in a flop house in Philadelphia. The
resounding howl of grief, anger, and bewilderment, would not abate
until Kindred turned his consummate talents and unflinching gaze on
Jared's all-too-brief life and unseemly death. Maybe, just maybe,
if he could tell how the beautiful blond boy in a white tuxedo
became a 'traveling kid' named Goblin-a wraithlike mess of tats and
vodka-who hopped trains for a living, Jared's life would have some
meaning and his grandpa would find some peace. Leave Out the Tragic
Parts is a rageful lullaby of love and regret and a wonder to
behold.--Jane Leavy, New York Times-bestselling author of The Big
Fella
Leave Out the Tragic Parts is an emotional and psychological voyage
into the psyche of a grief-stricken grandfather.... it must have
required a great amount of courage and intestinal fortitude on the
part of the writer...a home run.--New York Journal of Books
Leave Out the Tragic Parts serves as both an insightful look into
the transient world of freewheeling American drifters while also
being a vulnerable and open exploration of what it means to be a
family watching a loved one struggling with addiction. Kindred's
frequent thoughts of 'what if?' will resonate with many.--Library
Journal
Powerful and deeply affecting.--Booklist, starred review
The title of Dave Kindred's astonishing book is precisely what he
did not do. A world-class reporter used every ounce of his
journalistic skills to investigate a story-the life and death of a
beloved grandchild-that most of us would find daunting. But Kindred
tells the story truly and with love.--David Maraniss, author of A
Good American Family: The Red Scare and My Father
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