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Book cover of The Tao of Muhammad Ali
Sports & Adventure Biography, African American Biography & Memoir, General & Miscellaneous Religion, Sports - General & Miscellaneous, Sports & Adventure Biography, Asian Philosophy, Olympics and Olympic Sports, African American Biography

The Tao of Muhammad Ali

by Davis Miller
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Overview

Muhammad Ali is the one of the most famous figures in the history of sport. This is the story of his friendship with the author, a sportswriter. A unique and compelling story, rich with anecdotes and insights, it explores the nature of hero-worship, friendship and the relationship between fathers and sons.

Synopsis

It begins in 1964, when a sickly twelve-year-old boy stares at a TV image of the soon-to-be-greatest athlete of all time. It grows into a unique and powerful relationship that lasts for more than thirty years and forever changes the author's life. An original and inspiring coming-of-age story now lets you journey with them and experience...The Tao of Muhammad Ali. There are those who study faults in the earth's crust or the habits of storms or galaxies. Others meditate on a single social movement or the work of one man. For Davis Miller, the path to enlightenment coursed through the phenomenon known as Muhammad Ali. Through Ali's influence, Davis teaches himself boxing and the martial arts. Practicing these disciplines, Davis begins to wake and to feel, for the first time, that he is living in each moment. Later, as a young man, Davis comes to understand that Ali taught a generation a new way to see not only boxing, but the world. Because of Ali, Davis evolves from an adolescent paralyzed by sorrow to become a writer who chooses the writing life as part of his personal spiritual odyssey.

Esquire - Matthew DeAbitua

Miller's astounding book, more in the tradition of writers such as Tobias Wolff, Richard Ford and Tim O'Brien than that of mere biographies, is a seminal interpretation of fame, how it affects both those who have it and those who live in its shadow.

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Editorials

Daily Telegraph

Miller is Ali's spiritual Boswell. A compelling, strange and beautiful book.

FHM

An instant classic.

Matthew DeAbitua

Miller's astounding book, more in the tradition of writers such as Tobias Wolff, Richard Ford and Tim O'Brien than that of mere biographies, is a seminal interpretation of fame, how it affects both those who have it and those who live in its shadow.
β€”Esquire

Michael Mulhall

Filled with the clarity of ordinary human experience. Miller's best writing occurs when he recalls periods of his life when Ali was not part of it, for example the buzz of early journalistic successes or the sudden illness that took his father's life. After all, the real Zen lesson to be learned from a man like Ali, Miller argues, has nothing to do with lionizing the mighty infallible heroes whom we aspire to be. It is, instead, about living with the potent fallibility of ourselves.
β€”Times Literary Supplement

Tim Kawakami

Nobody has ever written so purely about Ali before. Maybe no one has ever written so purely about anyone.
β€”Los Angeles Times

Tom Shroder

When this manuscript arrived at our offices, we were floored by its extraordinary insight, unprecedented intimacy, and unexpected conclusions. Miller has elevated lowly celebrity journalism to the level of timeless literature. It is an honor to nominate his story for the Pulitzer Prize for feature writing.
β€”from the Miami Herald's Pulitzer Prize nomination

Publishers Weekly

To Miller, a contributing editor to Sport magazine, it seems as if Muhammad Ali has always been a part of his life-even as far back as January 1964, when the author "had just turned twelve and was the shortest and skinniest and sickliest kid in town." It was then that Miller first saw Ali, then known as Cassius Clay, on TV, in connection with his fight against Sonny Liston. Ali was, as always, supremely confident: "I'm young and handsome and fast and pretty and can't possibly be beat," Miller heard the boxer say. For Miller, "the voice was cooking with the cosmic." In this engaging blend of autobiography and portrait, Miller goes on to tell of meeting Ali in person, in 1975, at the boxer's training camp in Pennsylvania, where the writer sparred with the champ and took a punch that dazed him. Although Miller has met other boxing legends, Ali, he says, is in a class by himself-not only for his consummate skill and self-assurance but for other qualities as well, such as the quiet, sure, unmistakable way he befriends and enlivens others, seemingly relieving them at least in part of their troubles and worries. The author leaves no doubt that his admiration for and friendship with Ali has had a benevolent-perhaps salvational-effect on his own life. While the exact nature of Ali's effect on Miller remains unclear, the picture of Ali presented here offers many clues-the man Miller portrays so vividly is, though physically slowed by Parkinson's syndrome, full of charm, wit and religious fervor ("I've been everywhere in the world, seen everything, had everything a man can have. Don't none of it mean nothin'.... The only thing that matters is submitting to the will of God"). Told in clean, spare prose, Miller's warm celebration of Ali will have readers cheering for the man who calls himself "The Greatest of all Times"-and for his Boswell too. Simultaneous Time Warner AudioBook.(Nov.)

Library Journal

Miller's spiritual journey with friend Ali.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 1997
Publisher
Random House UK
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780099753414

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