This book surprised me. I had just read Swift's Gladys Aylward biography and enjoyed it very much. This book was very different. It focuses way more on Liddell's life than on his missionary experience. It begins with information about China's history to set the stage and then his parents' lives before he was born and continues until his death. His education and sports achievements were described in minutiae. Not being a sports person, that got a little old. Also, it seems the author's attitude about Liddell is far more adoring. She frequently calls him "perfect" and in her descriptions, people appear to practically worship him. She must have sensed this, because she sometimes attempted to downplay or excuse it. I know people are obsessive about sports, and possibly Swift might've been overly-dramatic, but I didn't care for it. She describes Liddell as perfectly humble about it, but... Also, the author occasionally had a negative attitude about Chinese people and made Christianity out to be a very "civilizing" force, particularly among poorer people. Maybe I was being oversensitive, but I definitely didn't get this feeling in Gladys Aylward, despite his teacher/missionary time there, 1925-1945, overlapping with hers, 1930-1970, and her work being primarily as a missionary to poorer people. Is this just how people write about sports heroes or would a different biography be better?