A seventeen-year-old book blog offering book reviews and news about authors, publishers, bookstores, and libraries.
Sunday, November 11, 2007
The Punch
It has been almost thirty years now (December 9, 1977) since a single ten-second snippet of NBA history forever changed the way that the game of professional basketball is played. On that evening in Los Angeles , Houston Rockets star Rudy Tomjanovich was almost killed by a single punch thrown by Kermit Washington of the Los Angeles Lakers. In the immediate aftermath of the incident, no one realized the tremendous impact that Tomjanovich’s injury would have, not only on the lives of the two men directly involved, but on the league itself. John Feinstein’s The Punch explains how the paths of Rudy Tomjanovich and Kermit Washington crossed that night in what was really more an accident than a fight and how they have become forever linked in the minds of basketball fans, something about which neither man is happy.
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I'm not a big sports fan, but I always enjoy Feinstein's commentary on NPR. Maybe I'll get this for my Dad :) Have you read any of Feinstein's other books?
ReplyDeleteIt is a well written book, Gentle Reader, and if your dad is a sports fan I'm pretty sure that he will enjoy it.
ReplyDeleteI've not read other Feinstein books but I'm curious now to see what else he has written.
its a very good book. it has a really good story behind it and its a wonderful story. Its a must read for basketball fans and basketball enthusiasts.
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