Thursday, October 27, 2011

FIGHT FILMS: KNOCKOUT ~ THE BOXER AND BOXING IN AMERICAN CINEMA

FIGHT FILMS: KNOCKOUT ~ THE BOXER AND BOXING IN AMERICAN CINEMA

LEGER GRINDON

The boxer stands alongside the cowboy, the gangster, and the detective as a character that shaped America's ideas of manhood. Knockout: The Boxer and Boxing in American Cinema is the first book-length study of the Hollywood boxing film, a popular movie entertainment since the 1930s, that includes such classics as Million Dollar Baby, Rocky, and Raging Bull. Leger Grindon relates the Hollywood boxing film to the literature of Jack London, Ernest Hemingway, and Clifford Odets; the influence of ring champions, particularly Joe Louis and Muhammad Ali; and controversies surrounding masculinity, race, and sports.

Knockout breaks new ground in film genre study by focusing on the fundamental dramatic conflicts uniting both documentary and fictional films with compelling social concerns. The boxing film portrays more than the rise and fall of a champion; it exposes the body in order to reveal the spirit. Not simply a brute, the screen boxer dramatizes conflicts and aspirations central to an American audience's experience. This book features chapters on the conventions of the boxing film, the history of the genre and its relationship to famous ring champions, and self-contained treatments of thirty-two individual films including a chapter devoted to Raging Bull.

FIGHT FICTION: TURNING PRO

FIGHT FICTION: TURNING PRO

KEVIN VIELDHOUSE

Two boxers, a white suburban college kid and a black inner-city fighter strive for a common goal: winning the National Golden Gloves championship before signing a lucrative contract to turn pro.

FIGHT FICTION: SO LONG, HECTOR BEBB

FIGHT FICTION: SO LONG, HECTOR BEBB

RON BERRY

In the daytime Hector Bebb drives a brewery lorry, but he's out early each morning for roadwork and every evening he trains for the big fight. Abe would have his boxers function as focused, sexless fighting machines. Hector has everything to make a world-beater, but his disillusioned wife.

Millie suffers frantic consequences, and when Hector returns after winning the big fight he meets bigger trouble. Told by a series of interior monologues, the 14 characters in this novel give a vivid and loving picture of the boxing world.

Originally published in 1970.

FIGHT FICTION: GOING FAST

FIGHT FICTION: GOING FAST

ELAINE MCCLUSKEY

In this punchy, uproarious romp of a novel, the Halifax boxing world peopled with has-beens, wannabes, and posers dressed in spandex, leopard prints, and tie-die touches gloves with the colourful world of sports reporting. Both groups need something hot with speedy delivery.

Enter a cast of misfits.

There's Turmoil Davies, an enigmatic Trinidadian heavyweight poised to storm the Halifax boxing world.

There's Ownie Flanagan, an old-school trainer who scans the obituaries for odd names and trains men with more ambition than talent. He's looking for "one real fighter" before he retires and believes Turmoil is it.

And then there's Scott MacDonald, a journalist assigned to the boxing beat – a grotty but welcome getaway that promises to let him relive his own glory days through other men's sweat.

With a wicked sense of humour, Elaine McCluskey conjures a larger-than-life world where spotty turf is defended with klutzy bravado down to the final, unpredictable eight-count.

FIGHT FICTION: DANIEL O’THUNDER!

FIGHT FICTION: DANIEL O’THUNDER!

IAN WEIR

Set in the 1850s in London, England, this story, told through the interwoven voices of several narrators, relates the adventures of a troubled but charismatic prize-fighting evangelist whose career finally takes him to British Columbia and the greatest match of his life when he challenges the Devil to a battle in the ring.

FIGHT FICTION: THE HUNDRED DOLLAR GIRL

FIGHT FICTION: THE HUNDRED DOLLAR GIRL

WILLIAM CAMPBELL GAULT

In the excellent "The Hundred Dollar Girl," (1961) Tough wise-ass P.I. Joe Puma tackles murder and broads when a contenders' voluptuous wife hires him to investigate her husband's manager.

FIGHT FICTION: JEM LANG'S SECRET PUNCH

FIGHT FICTION: JEM LANG'S SECRET PUNCH

R. GILMORE

Gilmore was a semi-prolific author churning out numerous boxing related titles during the ‘30s and ‘40s . . .

The Spartan Boxer. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1934.
A Champion's Bride. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1934.
Jem Lang's Secret Punch. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1934.
Champion Paddy O'Kane. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1935.
Bewitched. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1935.
Knuckleduster Jim. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1936.
The Kayo Gypsy. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1937.
Rough-Neck Rowan. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1939.
Wanted for Murder. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1939.
Death in the Ring. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1940.
Dynamite Dave. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1940.
Champion in Battle-Dress. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1942.
Double-Cross Murder. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1943.
The Kukri Killer. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1945.
The Missing Rajah. Dublin, Mellifont Press, 1946.

FIGHT FICTION: A STONE FOR DANNY FISHER

FIGHT FICTION: A STONE FOR DANNY FISHER

HAROLD ROBBINS

THIS EARLY NOVEL FROM ROBBINS IS OFTEN CONSIDERED ONE OF HIS BEST . . . ‘YA JUST GOTTA LOVE THE CURRENT REPRINT COVER . . .

As a teenager, Danny Fisher had all he ever wanted – a dog, a grown-up summer job, flirtatious relationships with older women – and a talent for ruthless boxing that quickly made him a star in the amateur sporting world. But when Danny's family falls on hard times, moving from their comfortable home in Brooklyn to Manhattan's squalid Lower East Side, he is forced to leave his carefree childhood behind. Facing poverty and daily encounters with his violent, anti-Semitic neighbors, Danny must fight both inside and outside the ring just to survive.

As his boxing becomes legendary in the city's seedy underworld, packed with wiseguys and loose women, everyone seems to want a hand in Danny's success. Robbins's colorful, fast-talking characters evoke the rough streets of Depression-era New York City. Ronnie, a prostitute ashamed of how far she's fallen and desperately in need of friendship; Sam, a slick bookie who wants to profit from Danny's boxing talent; and Nellie, a beautiful but lonely girl who refuses to believe Danny is beyond redemption – each of whom has a different vision of Danny's future – will help steer his rocky course.

Gritty, compelling, and groundbreaking for its time, A Stone for Danny Fisher is a tale of ambition, hope, and violence set in a distinct and dangerous period of American history. A classic, sexy bestseller by Harold Robbins, reintroduced to a whole new generation of readers.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

FIGHT FICTION: CORNERED!

FIGHT FICTION: CORNERED!

RICK FOLSTAD

It's the early 1970s in Miami and middleweight contender Boone Connors is learning how the brutality inside the prize ring is overshadowed only by the violence and corruption outside it.

Training at a rundown gym in one of the tougher parts of the city, Boone is getting ready for the biggest fight of his career. So is a poweful, crooked fight manager named Callahan, who tries to make sure Connors lises the fight after betting big money on the other guy.

Through murder, beatings and threats, Callahan controls the fight game in Miami, and Connors struggles to remain clean despite all the treachery and death around him.

FIGHT FICTION: POOR MAN’S OUT!

FIGHT FICTION: POOR MAN’S OUT!

MARK AFFIF

KINDLE EDITION: $2.99

A new novel based on the true story of an American prizefighter in the post-WWII glory days of professional boxing. The younger of two sons, the middle child of seven in a fatherless, immigrant Lebanese family, loses the full use of his right arm in a childhood “accident” that prevents him from joining in the war effort, but not from taking his battle into the ring to fight for his family’s dignity and financial viability.

Alternating from a shifting third-person to an introspective first-person that is bare-boned and illuminating, our protagonist unwittingly uncovers the essential truths of the warrior mentality, whether in the ring or on the battlefield.

Torn by familial and neighborhood loyalties, ultimately by non-negotiable ethical codes, his fierce heart is straining from the emotional hit of his life, as he comes into the fight of his life, the elimination bout for the Middleweight Championship of the World. Written from the inside-out, this novel reveals that true understanding of a character is achieved not by an exposition of what he looks like to the world, but by what the world looks like to him.

FOR MORE CLICK HERE

FIGHT FICTION: WATCH OUT FOR WILLIE CARTER

FIGHT FICTION: WATCH OUT FOR WILLIE CARTER

THEODORE NAIDISH

(1944) Boxing prospect marries Greenwich Village nightclub singer with mixed results.

FIGHT FICTION: A RIGHT TO THE HEART

FIGHT FICTION: A RIGHT TO THE HEART

REITA LAMBERT

(1939) High society girl Holly goes to her first fight at the Garden and ends up marring a boxing champ from a poor background – sparks fly.

FIGHT FICTION: KNOCKOUT

FIGHT FICTION: KNOCKOUT

CHARLES FRANCIS COE

(1936) The story of Flash Phibin, who goes from circus strongman to become "The Yankee Yahoo," heavyweight champion of the world, told in the hardbitten language Coe employed in his gangster and mystery novels.

FIGHT FICTION: THE DUMB-BELL

FIGHT FICTION: THE DUMB-BELL

W. B. M. FERGUSON 

(1927) Shy, modest, and scholarly boxing champ resists blandishments to cash in on his fame.

FIGHT FICTION: UNCIVILIZED!

FIGHT FICTION: UNCIVILIZED!

KENNETH GUTHRIE

UNCIVILIZED 1: OLD SCHOOL BOXING

Joe is a fighter in a world where violence is unlimited and death is a reality. Today he gets a deal he can't refuse: Lord Thomson is offering $300 for a fight to the death at his mansion. Joe knows he can't afford to refuse this one with a little daughter and not enough money coming in from his other fights. The fight that follows will burn in to the crowd's minds the name 'Joe the Pole' for eternity and beyond. That is if he wins.

3500 words

UNCIVILIZED 2: THE CHAMPIONSHIP

Joe is back and this time he's going to take on the champ. He's had a month of training and he couldn't be more ready. Little does he know Lord Thomson has a surprise waiting for him that will change his life. Read on to find out about Joe's biggest fan.

2500 words

UNCIVILIZED 3: BACKYARD BRAWL

Joe has signed up to be the champion of both the underground scene and the legit pro-boxing world's number one, but to do it he has to fight the three best fighters in the illegal fighting world and live to talk about it. It is the hardest fight of Joe's life and one which will decide more than just his future, but the future of boxing itself.

2200 words.

UNCIVILIZED 4: FINAL COMPETITOR

Joe has one more fight to go and it is the monster that started all this. This man has been fighting his way through the world of boxing in the New World and he's back for vengeance. This is Joe's last fight. Look forward to an epic read you will not forget!

2500 words.

FIST: ROUND 0NE

Jack lost his big fight in pro-boxing years ago. Now he’s part of a bloodier sport: One with no gloves and no mercy. Jack’s last chance has come and he’s ready. Today he will climb the next notch in the ladder to the champ or end up a bloody mess in the emergency room. It’s that kind of fight.

FOR MORE CLICK HERE AND CLICK HERE