The last folk hero The life and myth of Bo Jackson

Jeff Pearlman

Book - 2022

Drawing on 720 original interviews, a New York Times best-selling sportswriter captures as never before the elusive truth about the greatest athlete of all time who took the world by storm from the mid-1980s into the early 1990s--and then, almost overnight, disappeared.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York : Mariner Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Jeff Pearlman (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 484 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 437-464) and index.
ISBN
9780358437673
  • Introduction
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. "The Little Rock Chucker"
  • Chapter 2. A Black Bruce Jenner
  • Chapter 3. Emergence
  • Chapter 4. Don't Mess with Bo Jackson
  • Chapter 5. The Epitome of Superman
  • Chapter 6. Village on the Plain
  • Chapter 7. Bus Station
  • Chapter 8. Off Base
  • Chapter 9. Greg Pratt
  • Chapter 10. Paydays
  • Chapter 11. A Baird Man
  • Chapter 12. Senioritis
  • Chapter 13. Clutter
  • Chapter 14. Bucked Up
  • Chapter 15. Memphis
  • Chapter 16. Royal
  • Chapter 17. Mixed Royalties
  • Chapter 18. The Different Running Back
  • Chapter 19. Monday Night
  • Chapter 20. Icon
  • Chapter 21. The Greatest Year I
  • Chapter 22. The Greatest Year II
  • Chapter 23. Prime Time
  • Chapter 24. Hip
  • Chapter 25. Reduced
  • Chapter 26. The Return
  • Chapter 27. A Hog's Heart on a Fence Post
  • Chapter 28. The Circus Act
  • Chapter 29. Aftermath
  • Acknowledgments
  • A Note About Sourcing
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Veteran sportswriter Pearlman delivers a captivating, copiously researched portrait of once-in-a-century supernova Bo Jackson, who excelled at the highest levels in football (1985 Heisman winner), baseball (1989 All-Star Game MVP), and even track (qualifying for the NCAA nationals in the 100-meter dash--twice). The author spares no details in limning the destitute, cruelly violent childhood Jackson miraculously survived; his evolution as a world-class athlete; friendships and enmities with coaches, teammates, reporters, family, and fans; and his admirable disdain for the trappings of success. But it's the individual moments Pearlman shares that startle: Jackson's perfectly thrown missile from the left-field corner to cut down a would-be winning run at the plate (as defensive players were leaving the field and umps were out of position), his fifth-fastest 60-meter dash in Auburn University's history in his first track meet, the 450-foot batting-practice shot Jackson hit lefthanded (he was a righty) in Minnesota. This list is almost endless for Jackson. Superhuman feats manifested in an all-too-human soul.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Sports journalist Pearlman (Showtime: Magic, Kareem, Riley, and the Los Angeles Lakers Dynasty of the 1980s) delivers an entertaining biography of star multisport athlete Bo Jackson. Jackson's one-of-a-kind athletic ability was "mythological," Pearlman writes, noting that he was capable of "things so unprecedented, so spectacular, that one must wonder if they were ever actually done at all." Jackson's "uniquely athletic" legend started during his childhood in Alabama the 1960s (a neighbor claims to have seen him throw a rock 200 yards), and Pearlman recounts how his discovery of sports changed his life, beginning with his joining Little League at age 10 (he was forbidden from playing football by his mother but defied her in ninth grade). Pearlman also details Jackson's incredible achievements, which included a Heisman Trophy in 1985 as well as his becoming the only professional athlete ever named a baseball and football All-Star (first with the Kansas City Royals in 1989, then with the L.A. Raiders in 1990) before retiring from pro sports in 1991 after a hip injury. The author's facility at rendering dramatic sports moments into prose, such as when, in 1989, Jackson made a miraculous deep outfield throw to get a speedy opposing player out at home plate (spectators witnessed him "rearing back and uncorking a flat-footed bazooka blast that soared high above shortstop Kurt Stillwell"), makes this a standout addition to biographies of hall-of-fame athletes. Jackson's fans are in for a treat. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An appreciative life of sports star Vincent "Bo" Jackson (b. 1962), a star in both football and baseball. In his latest sports bio, prolific sportswriter Pearlman demonstrates Jackson's near-mythical achievements on the gridiron and diamond, whether "throwing a football straight into the air and hitting the New Orleans Superdome scoreboard--140 feet above his head," or "the 1989 throw from the leftfield corner to gun down Seattle's Harold Reynolds at home" as an adult or chucking a rock a couple of hundred yards as a 7-year-old. Much of the book centers on Jackson's accomplishments as a player for Auburn, often the Alabama Crimson Tide's poor relation on the Southern football circuit, at least until Jackson helped engineer crushing victory over their archrivals (legendary Alabama coach Bear Bryant retired immediately afterward). Of particular interest to aspiring athletes are the pages devoted to Jackson's carefully orchestrated negotiations with the MLB and NFL, who wanted him so badly that he was able to play both baseball and football concurrently--albeit not without some hardball thrown by the owner of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who treated Jackson precisely like "a poor kid from East Bumfuck, Alabama." Taking down other sports heroes in the bargain, notably Reggie Jackson (no relation) and Deion Sanders, Pearlman throws in about every sports cliché in existence, from staccato sentence fragments to overwrought mixed metaphors ("Jackson was no longer a secret weapon. If anything, he was a flashing bolt of lightning"). Yet there are revelations, as well, including an explanation of how he came to be known as Bo. Ultimately, Pearlman is no mere hero worshipper, writing of his subject, "he is far from warm and bubbly, and oftentimes quite suspicious of the motives of anyone not named Bo Jackson." A good choice for devotees, showing how their hero sometimes has feet of clay--but remains a hero all the same. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.