Review "A discussion that will inform and delight both general reader and historian." --Tracy Callis, Ibro research historian"Nicholson explores an era when prizefighting was evolving into boxing, when fist-fighting as a blood sport and a test of will and honor was giving way to hit and don't be hit. A book that should be read." --Harry Shaffer, Antiquities of the Prize Ring"A fantastic read...unsung heroes get their due, and the author's spirit lights up every page." --Bob Oleson, veteran boxing trainer, promoter, and matchmaker. Read more From the Inside Flap This volume offers detailed information about the boxers who were active during boxing's "Golden Age," 1890 to 1910, focusing primarily on George "Kid" Lavigne, Bob Fitzsimmons, Barbados Joe Walcott, Joe Gans, Terry McGovern, Sam Langford, and Stanley Ketchel, and their opponents, who were also key figures. Read more See all Editorial Reviews
P**H
Ring Pioneers
Kelly Richard Nicholson opens the foreward of this book informing us he is an officer of the International Hall of Fame and he is writing this book to keep alive the memories of some of the immortal pioneers of the sport.As he relates, there have now been biographies of several of the seven fighters he keys on. Sam Langford had a seminal biography written by Clay Moyle of his life and amazing career. Bob Fitzsimmons has been featured by Adam Pollock, and at least two biographers, including Gilbert Odd. Stanley Ketchel has had two legitimate and one awful biography written of his fast life, brilliant career and tragic end. Joe Gans has also had a thorough and well written book written of his life and career.To my knowledge, Barbados Joe Wolcott, Terry McGovern and Kid LaVigne to my knowledge have not been written about.But still, Mr. Nicholson has an historians eye for story telling, and offers many fresh insights into not only these fighters, but also many of their opponents that I have not seen revealed yet.These fighters plied their trades in the early 1900's and the competition was much more intense than it is today. The crowds were better informed, and the fans were more invested and passionate, and the betting more informed and wide spread.This book offers a look at these men in the context of their times. Mr. Nicholson is a skilled storyteller, and yet less skilled as a writer. While informed, he doesn't quite bring the reader into the suspense and drama of the fights themselves.Still, a worthy read for the boxing officionado.
P**R
Wrong choice of fighters
The author has chosen 7 great boxers from the Golden Age of boxing 1890 to 1910 to write about in this book. George "Kid" Lavigne, Bob Fitzsimmons, Barbados Joe Walcott, Joe Gans, Terry McGovern, Sam Langford and Stanley Ketchel.We get a glimpse of all of these fighters as well as some of their toughest opponents in the 210 pages. The read is interesting and passes quickly but there is a problem.I think the author chose some fighters who did not need more to be written about them - Fitzsimmons, Gans and Langford all have superb books devoted totally to them and to be going over some of their greatest achievements in a brief form when other more deserving boxers (of books) could have been discussed was a mistake.All in all, this book is ok but I really think it could have been so much better.
S**E
A must for boxing historians
This is a classic book looking into the 19th and early 20th century in era of real Iron Man a must-read
J**D
Five Stars
Thank You!!
F**T
A nice little book on boxing's "Golden Age", but for whom was it written?
Kelly Richard Nicholson's new boxing book, HITTERS, DANCERS AND RING MAGICINAS: SEVEN BOXERS OF THE GOLDEN AGE AND THEIR CHALLENGERS, examines seven great turn of the century fighters - George "Kid" Lavigne (21 page chapter), Bob Fitzsimmons (39 pages), "Barbados" Joe Walcott (14 pages), Joe Gans (19 pages), "Terrible" Terry McGovern (19 pages), Sam Langford (21 pages), & Stanley Ketchel (33 pages) - who fought in the years after the transition from the bareknuckle era to the gloved one. The author starts off with a brief but informative chapter that outlines the evolution of prizefighting up to the aforementioned transition, then provides generally excellent chapter-long biographies of each of the above boxers (with profiles of their most noteworthy opponents), and winds up with a chapter regarding devvelopments in the sport since the "Golden Age", with the opinions of the author and those of past and present historians as to some of the merits of "old time" fighters relative to boxers of subsequent eras. On the whole, this is a good - albeit short - book, well written, insightful, entertaining, and well-researched.There is, however, a major problem with Nicholson's work, which is that it shortchanges its (logical) primary audience/buyers: "hardcore" fight fans. One would think that boxing aficionados (those of us who are interested in all boxing eras, anyway) would have ALREADY read the available (full length) biographies of some of the magnificent seven Nicholson examines, such as International Boxing Research Organization (IBRO) member Clay Moyle's utterly superb Sam Langford: Boxing's Greatest Uncrowned Champion (2007), Colleen Aycock and Mark Scott's excellent - albeit very biased - Joe Gans: A Biography of the First African American World Boxing Champion (2008), and any of the recently published and generally good bio's of "Freckled Bob" (though my favourite is still Gilbert Odd's THE FIGHTING BLACKSMITH: THE STORY OF BOB FITZSIMMONS [1976]), so one must wonder why he devoted (whole and, in the case of Fitz, long) chapters to Langford, Gans, and Fitzsimmons, especially since he imparts little, if any, new info about them. Surely, Nicholson would have better served hardcore boxing fans better if he had gone into greater depth regarding the lives (and fights!) of Lavigne, Walcott, and McGovern (I exclude Ketchel here because, while there hasn't been an in depth bio written of him lately - a good one, anyway - there are some good Ketchel profiles out there already, such as the chapters on the "Michigan Assassin" in Moyle's book and in Graeme Kent's The Great White Hopes: The Quest to Defeat Jack Johnson [2005], and on IBRO member Monte Cox's website, coxscorner) AND providedlonger, more detailed profiles of the super seven's worthier opponents and other greats of that era, such as Young Griffo, George Dixon, "Young" Peter Jackson, "Mysterious" Billy Smith, Bobby Dobbs, Jack Blackburn, Dave Holly, "Nonpareil" Jack Dempsey, Kid McCoy, Tommy Ryan, etc (AND, perhaps, given a couple of them the full chapter treatment - indeed, if written with casual or new fans in mind, it might have been better to write full [but shorter] chapters on more than just these seven fighters).Other quibbles with thisbook include a) its dearth of photos (just one or two of each of the seven pugilists); b) the lack of a chapter specifically addressing the different conditions (equipment, rules, etc) under which turn of the century boxers fought compared to other eras, which would have benefited the "casual" boxing fans who grabbed this work (while the author does mention old time conditions here and there in the first eight chapters and addresses some of the differences in the book's Afterword, he more or less elaborates those differences as "asides" or brief discussions rather than making a cohesive argument on a particualr facet of boxing; for example, Nicholson could have explained that fighters of the seven's era were/had to be MUCH more durable than, say, modern fighters because the conditions necessitated it, conditions such as fighting with smaller, less padded, less water-resistant gloves that had separate, unpadded thumbs, fighting without benefit of mouthguards, protective cups, and lubricants on the face, having to deal with referees who regularly turned a blind eye to all manner of fouls, having to occasionally fight opponents from higher weight classes to make ends meet when bouts with good boxers of one's own weight were hard to come by, having to often enter the ring for bouts while nursing serious injuries, etc, and the author could have pointed out that, although modern fighters use gloves with much more padding than in previous eras, engage in championship bouts that are of shorter duration than in previous eras, generallt fight much less often, and are reputed to be fitter and better conditioned than fighters of yesterday, they, nonetheless, tend to throw less punches per round than inany gloved era, save the "Golden Age" when fights were often of MUCH greater duration and the average fighter fought much more frequently ~ okay, okay, maybe TOO much detail here); c) given the brevity of the book (just 188 pages of "text") and its price, the author really ought to have included the sevne fighters' ring records or, at least, their measurements; d) Nicholson's erroneous statement that former heavyweight chasmpion Jim Jeffries was 6'2", which so many others have also claimed (this is a pet peeve of mine because in photos and film clips that show him standing next/close to the 5'11' or 11 1/2" or 11 3/4" Fitzsimmons or the 6'1" James J. Corbett, the "Boilermaker" seems to be about the same height as - if not shorter than - the former and definitely appears to be at least 2 inches shorter than the latter); e) the author's ridiculous assertion (while trying to illustrate the evolution of ring technique) that Gene Tunney's improved showings in subsequent bouts against Harry Greb after getting pummeled in their first encounter was a victory of "Gene's (improving) ring science" over Greb's (unorthodox) ring style (not only does Nicholson ignore the fact that the "Fighting Marine" grew from a "medium-sized" light heavyweight to a [small] heavyweight during the course of their five bout series whereas the "Pittsburgh Wildcat" remained a natural middleweight, that Tunney was young and edging toward his prime while Greb started to go "downhill" some time around their second or third bout, and that Greb's eyesight had been progressively deteriorating since BEFORE the first Tunney bout, but the author also doesn't seem to grasp the fact that "Greb's all-angles attack" WAS a demonstration of ring science in that positioning [and re-positioning) oneself at an angel to an opponent at which one can easily hit one's counterpart while he/she cannot easily land in return IS one of the most important skills in ring craftmanship - indeed, whenever Tunney spoke of his bouts with the "Human Windmill", he made a pointof saying that Greb rarely stood dirrectly in front of him and was always moving, either in and out on Gene or circling to the side); f) the lack of a more in depth account of the 1904 Walcott-Gans bout (the Aycock & Scott book also failed toprovide one and Nicholson should have known this because he states that he read their book, so it could have been something new for him to "bring to the table"); g) the lack of a citation concerning the weigh-in weights of Gans and Lanjgford for their 1903 mill (I only mention this because Nicholson's info contradicts the weights given by Aycock & Scott AND by Moyle, and NONE of the three books cite a source); and h) the fact that the chapter/endnotes and their "citation numbers" often do not correspond/align. (Perhaps, I am nitpicking on some points above, but one must assume that a HISTORIAN is probably writing for an informed audience, right? In addition, this book is pretty expensive relative to its length/size.)STILL, this is, again, a good informative book, especially for casual or new boxing fans, but might not be worth the $30+ outlay to boxing fans who've already familiarized themselves with Lavigne, Fitz, Walcott, Gans, McGovern, Langford, and Ketchel via other sources. Incidentally, all of the books cited above are available here at Amazon.com and I highly recommend all of them.
M**1
Good book - narrow audience
An enjoyable narrow audience book geared to those with a passion for the "sweet science" boxing. The book traces the lives and careers of some of the greatest early stars of the ring. (Bob Fitzsimmons, Joe Alcott, etc). These were some amazing guys fighting without gloves or with gloves so light that there was very little cushion. The author raves about the powerful punching ability of these men who sometimes fought forty round fights. There are knockouts but not that many. So, I have to wonder why he and others think these boxers are generally the best pound for pound in history.discounting anyone after 1950.. I don't buy it but the book is a fascinating study just the same.
R**K
A good read for those of us interested in a bygone era of boxing
After reading the rather lengthy review by the "feedthecat," I was wondering if this was a book for me. But after picking it up and reading it, I found it interesting and informative. I suppose had I done the extensive study and reading of the other reviewer, I might not have found something "new." But for me, just a fan and follower of boxing, I thought the book a very nice overview of a little discussed, bygone era. There were interesting anecdotes, great descriptions of the fighting conditions of the day, and a lot of information the average fan might not know. I thought the breakdown of chapters into sections an excellent device to break the longer ones into consumable readings. I recommend this book without reservation to anyone who is looking for a good boxing read.
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