So far this collection has been brilliant.
Essay One: Risks, Dangers Always in Play. A discussion of the risks that athletes take, especially people participating in the luge race. An excellent essay that discusses the reasons why people pursue risky sports
Essay Two: Breathless. A wonderful essay about someone who is trying to dive deeper than any human has, without any equipment. The person has done substantial research on how people respond to oxygen deprivation. The author does an excellent job of explaining the limits to deep sea diving and how our body responds when it is starved of oxygen.
Essay Three: The Surfing Savant. A masterpiece. The author does such a good job of drawing us into the story, explaining the surfing community, and giving a vivid portrait of the surfing savant. This story alone is worth the price of the book.
Essay Four: School of Fight. Another masterpiece about two hockey players who open up a camp where kids learn how to fight. The author, who played hockey, gives a ringing defense of the role of fighting in games, and his discussion of what is learned in the camp is outstanding.
Essay Five: The Franchise. A great essay talking about the development of the Madden game. He does a great job of talking about the business model, the breakthroughs that the developers had to make before the product could succeed and the essential role Madden plays in the development of the game.
Essay Six: Eight Seconds. Another masterpiece about the winning goal Team Canada scored in overtime to beat Team USA and win the gold medal in 2010. I think it is quite difficult for authors to write about sports plays without losing the reader in an avalanche of details. But the author does an amazing job of describing the goal, he has talked to all the players involved in the play, and he has brief biographies of the key players involved. A stunning piece of writing.
Essay Seven: ABC News Investigation. Not a masterpiece of writing but an important story to preserve. I had not remembered anything about this story. It is sadly familiar: young girls being abused and attacked and no one stepping forward to stop what they knew what was going on. And then the people in charge of the investigation issuing such awful statements that try to deflect blame from them.
Essay Eight: Own Goal. A great essay about a soccer tournament created for people who are homeless. The author takes things seriously, writes well, and gives compelling portraits of the people he writes about. One person he writes about is someone who appears to be someone who will find redemption but as the story moves on, the author has to deal with that person and realizes that dealing with people is more complicated than it might seem. There is no neat and happy ending but rather a moving account of people struggling through life.
Essay Nine: Culture of Silence. An excellent essay by Sally Jenkins on, as the title indicates, the culture of silence that allows top college and pro athletes to abuse and kill women. People could have stepped forward but didn't. Especially the pro athletes are surrounded by people who allow them to get away with sexual assaults.
Essay Ten: High School Dissonance. A short but powerful essay that shows how poorly people in charge behave, the lack of courage, the lack of moral principles, and their willingness to lie about what happened in order to justify their behavior.
Essay Eleven: Gentling Cheatgrass. I was not able to connect with this essay.
Essay Twelve: Pride of a Nation. Another great essay in which the author tells the story of native Americans playing lacrosse. The writing is outstanding, the story is powerful, and he treats all the people with respect.
Essay Thirteen: The quality of these stories is at such a high level. This one is another masterpiece. The author recounts the day when a 14 year old was asked to help in a rescue mission for a charter plane that had crashed and the years he has spent trying to come to terms with what he did and did not do that day.
Essay Fourteen: The Patch. Another essay I couldn't get into. I must say I find much of John McPhee's writing to be difficult to connect with.
Essay Fifteen: Fetch Daddy a Drink. Well not all the essays are going to be good and this one is just awful. It is not surprising because I have found few, if any, of P.J. O'Rourke's works worthy of reading.
Essay Sixteen: Trick Plays. Humor is tricky and this piece did not interest me in the least.
Essay Seventeen: Yet another masterpiece. The author's account of being a wrestler, coming to terms with his losses, dealing with his father, and dealing with his children is just outstanding.