The young man at the centre of this "compelling book" ("The Economist") will one day be among the most highly paid athletes in the National Football League. When Michael Lewis introduces him to the reader, he is one of thirteen children by a crack-addicted mother; he does not know his real name, his father, his birthday or any of the things a child might learn in school-such as how to read or write. Nor has he ever touched a football.He takes up American football and school, after a rich, Evangelical, Republican family plucks him from the mean streets. Their love is the first great force that alters the world's perception of the boy, whom they adopt. The second force is the evolution of professional American football into a game where the quarterback must be protected at any cost. Lewis' protagonist turns out to be the priceless combination of size, speed and agility necessary to guard the quarterback's greatest vulnerability: his blind side. About the AuthorMICHAEL LEWIS is the author of the bestsellers Liar's Poker, The New New Thing, and "brilliant" (The Specator), "fascinating story and absorbing read" (The Daily Telegraph), Moneyball (ISBN 978 0 393 32481 5). ReviewsLewis here weaves together two very interesting tales. The first relates to the rising salaries of National Football League (NFL) offensive left tackles large enough, agile enough, and fast enough to protect a quarterback, keep him from being blindsided, possibly fumbling, and perhaps suffering game- or career-ending injuries. The second is the incredible journey of young African American Michael Oher, touted as a future NFL starting offensive tackle, who rose from virtual homelessness in Memphis to play football at a white, evangelical Christian high school and was adopted into a well-to-do white family. The confluence of events involving Oher and Tennessee prep football is very well told by sportswriter Lewis. The listener also gains insight into recruiting at the college level and the economics of free agency in professional football. Stephen Hoye reads the story with spirit and feeling. Very highly recommended for sports collections.-Cliff Glaviano, Bowling Green State Univ. Libs., OH Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information. "The Blind Side is a wonderful tale." John Gapper, Financial Times "Lewis has made a habit of writing about sport recently, but sport is really only a subtext for a much more meaningful examination of class and race. I wept at the end, something I have not done at the end of a work of non-fiction for a very long time." Malcolm Gladwell, The Observer, Books of the Year 2006 "The strongest strand of The Blind Side is about sporting strategy. When brain defeats brawn in one of Michael Lewis's books, you can almost hear the prose style lift off." Ed Smith, The Times "[The Blind Side] provides deep insights about sport and America." The Spectator" As he did so memorably for baseball in Moneyball, Lewis takes a statistical X-ray of the hidden substructure of football, outlining the invisible doings of unsung players that determine the outcome more than the showy exploits of point scorers. In his sketch of the gridiron arms race, first came the modern, meticulously choreographed passing offense, then the ferocious defensive pass rusher whose bone-crunching quarterback sacks demolished the best-laid passing game, and finally the rise of the left tackle the offensive lineman tasked with protecting the quarterback from the pass rusher whose presence is felt only through the game-deciding absence of said sacks. A rare creature combining 300 pounds of bulk with "the body control of a ballerina," the anonymous left tackle, Lewis notes, is now often a team's highest-paid player. Lewis fleshes this out with the colorful saga of left tackle prodigy Michael Oher. An intermittently homeless Memphis ghetto kid taken in by a rich white family and a Christian high school, Oher's preternatural size and agility soon has every college coach in the country courting him obsequiously. Combining a tour de force of sports analysis with a piquant ethnography of the South's pigskin mania, Lewis probes the fascinating question of whether football is a matter of brute force or subtle intellect. Photos. (Oct.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information. |