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Book cover of What a Time It Was The Best of W. C. Heinz on Sports
Sports Essays, Sports - History

What a Time It Was The Best of W. C. Heinz on Sports

by W. C. Heinz
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Overview

Many think that W. C. Heinz stands right alongside the legendary New York Times columnist Red Smith as the greatest sports writer of the 1940s and '50s. Paving the way for the New Journalism of Gay Talese, Tom Wolfe, and Jimmy Breslin, Heinz was the first sports writer to make his living exclusively by writing for magazines. Whether describing mobbed-up boxers, crippled jockeys, lame horses, aspiring ballplayers, or driven football coaches, Heinz's finely etched, indelible portraits recall a sports era less influenced by money, image, and self-indulgence. He collaborated with Vince Lombardi on the book Run to Daylight, cowrote the novel M*A*S*H with Dr. H. Richard Hornberger under the pseudonym Richard Hooker, and wrote what Hemingway considered to be the "only good novel about a fighter I've ever read," The Professional. In this collection of Heinz's finest writing, we meet the immortal Red Grange; the injury-riddled, "purest baseball player" of his era, Pistol Pete Reiser; the greatest pound-for-pound fighter of all time, Sugar Ray Robinson; and the Brownsville Bum, Bummy Davis, in a story that Jimmy Breslin calls the "best magazine sports story of all time." Here is a long-overdue homage to a vastly underappreciated writer.

About the Author, W. C. Heinz

W. C. Heinz is the coauthor of Run to Daylight, the best-selling autobiography of Vince Lombardi, and MASH, the novel that later became a successful movie and TV series. Da Capo recently published an omnibus collection of his best sportswriting, What a Time It Was. W. C. Heinz lives in Vermont.

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Editorials

Boston Herald

One of the most respected sportswriters of the 20th century, a peer of Damon Runyon, A. J. Liebling, and Red Smith.

Elmore Leonard

Every W.C. Heinz sentence is as clear and cold as an ice cube.

Entertainment Weekly

Selected as the "It Lit Comeback".

Esquire

The writing here is so pure and vivid, the voice so clear, the style so original, that you can almost see the blood dripping from Rocky Graziano's face...

Jeff McGregor

Tells his stories the way Heifitz fiddled or Hopper painted, or the way Willie Pep boxedβ€”with a kind of lyrical understatement.
β€”Sports Illustrated

Salon.com

This isn't a book, it's an event....In decades to come, Heinz's work will be the primary window through which we will view the giants of his age.

Vanity Fair

No one will ever produce work of comparable range.

Book Details

Published
March 22, 2001
Publisher
Da Capo Press
Pages
316
Format
Paperback, 2001
ISBN
9780306810435

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