An interesting, if workmanlike memoir from one of boxing's most famous trailer, My View From the Corner is Angelo Dundee reflecting back on roughly fifty years in the sport.
Dundee, who died in 2012, worked with a who's who of boxing: Sugar Ray Leonard, George Foreman, and most famously, Muhammad Ali. Indeed, Ali dominates this book, and occupies the bulk of it's narrative. There isn't much here that hasn't been told before by other writers, but with someone as famed as Ali, there might not be much left to uncover. That said, it's still interesting to see not only that Ali mattered, but why he was such a controversial figure - and that Dundee was mostly left alone to do his job.
The later chapters on Dundee's time are more interesting: his time with Leonard covered an infamous bout where Roberto Duran said "no mas" and quit (a quote Dundee disputes, by the way) and a brutal fight against Marvin Hagler in 1987. This period ended over money disputes, with Leonard shying away from defending Dundee to his manager - an unflattering portrait painted by Dundee, who elsewhere has nary a bad word to say about anyone he trained.
Co-written with longtime boxing journalist/tv personality Bert Sugar, the book is told generally in a loose and conversational style. Sugar was never known as a prose stylist, and you can see why here: it's written like a long feature for a magazine. True, one in a while they occasionally go into detail, but largely My View... falls back on old stories and drops names from a good 60, 70 years ago. A few stories are repeated, too.
It's not really the kind of book I'd recommend to anyone, except maybe hardcore boxing people, but there are worse ways to spend an afternoon or two. If you go in expecting to hear some familiar stories retold as if over a glass of wine, you'll have a pleasant enough time. But those looking for insight into Ali might want to stick with Thomas Hauser's biography; I'm less sure if anyone's written definitive books on Foreman or Leonard yet.