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Far Afield: A Sportswriting Odyssey


by S. L. Price

List Price: $24.95
Price: $18.21
You Save: $6.74 (27%)
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Sales Rank: 573759
Studio: The Lyons Press
Binding: Hardcover
Number Of Pages: 256
Publication Date: September 01, 2007
Publisher: The Lyons Press


CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.0 based on 4 reviews)

A great, fun, fast read!  
I don't even watch professional sports (other than tennis) and I loved reading this book!
August 14, 2008

A mixed bag  
I am familiar with S.L Price's work in the pages of Sports Illustrated. In a way that was a hindeence when i started this book. i expected straight sports writing. Instead we share a a move he made with his wife and hildren when he accepted a job that took him to South France and allowed him to observe sports outside of the US. He travels to Greece, Paris, Pakistan, anywhere there is competition and immerses himself in the event. Traveling in Europe in post 9/11 proved eye opening and horizion expanding...no longer in the safe confines of the US and familiar sports and customs. The story of the family moving to a new place and immersing themselves in the daily life, though seemingly a side story, is sweet and moving. My problems came when the narritave switched from present day back to experiences in the past as he wrote for SI. It didn't read as easily as I had hoped. I guess I am spoiled from all the SI pieces. Still a sweet read.
November 08, 2007

Not what I expected  
This book was not what I expected in numerous ways. When I read the initial previews I had expected something along the lines of Peter Mayle meets Peter King romp: a travelogue and a litany of sports related observations. This book gave me that and more.

The travelogue is your typical Innocent Abroad themed descriptions peppered with humorous anecdotes. This was better done by Twain. The sports stories went a lot deeper than what Price did at SI. This was the original intent of his adventures in Europe afterall: write more in depth about non-American sports. And it was very well done, Price is a great writer.

There are basically two things that strikes me. One is the confessional aspect of this book: he lays out all the unpleasantness in his life and he lays it out bluntly. He chastises himself for his own perceived blindspots and shortcomings. A major theme is how he deals with his families -the one he has with his wife and the one he was born into- during this short trip and for all of his life.

The circumstances, travel and personal confessional, reminds me of Elizabeth Gilbert's book Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia. Her's has more food, meditation, and sex , his has more sports. Much like her book, the reader gets drawn into his thought process, his pain and suffering, and his moments of transcendance. I am not all that sure that the milieu of Europe and sports writing quite did the same thing for Price as Italy, India, and Bali did for Gilbert.

The other revelation is the process of writing. When Price had his a-ha moment about writing in his own words about his own thought, the thought became a double edged sword: it was both obvious and illuminating at the same time.

Price's thought cycle involving Michael Jordan was interesting and yet also banal. I had guessed at what Jordan was about years ago, the portrait that Price painted revealed nothing new. But I did learn about Pakistani and Indian cricketers, Greek track doping scandal, skiing, Wimbledon, the Athens Olympics and just how paranoid the Greeks are.

This is not a sit down and read book. There sections of that, but there are plenty of sit down and contemplate sections too. It is not an easy book to read, but it is well worth the effort.
November 07, 2007

One of the best writers ever ... no kidding.  
Scott Price is not just a great sports writer. He's a great writer. I know him from college at UNC-Chapel Hill. He wrote for the college newspaper. Even then I thought he was one of the best writers I had ever read. He has only improved over the last ... hmmm ... 25 years. I am no sports fan, but I thoroughly enjoyed this book and learned quite a bit not only about sports but about different cultures and political clashes. Think "Under the Tuscan Sun" with a brain. Price is the quintessential intellectual, yet he is not aloof. He writes honestly about his family and feelings about the world he found while traveling around Europe and countries even farther afield. The only disappointment was that the only photo of Scott was a side view. If I was as handsome as him, I'd have my picture on the book jacket! (Remember that for your next book, Scott!) So don't wait for the paperback. I agree with the comment above. I WOULD buy a grocery list if Scott Price wrote it. Treat yourself. Read this book! Enjoy!
October 23, 2007


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