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Shadow Boxers: Sweat, Sacrifice & the Will to Survive in American Boxing Gyms

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Boxing gyms are uncovered in all of their glorious grunge in these photographs and essays that reveal both the stark reality of success and the possibility of promise in the sport of boxing. This intimate look at the fighters, trainers, and hangers-on who inhabit these gyms brings to life the tough—and surprisingly tender—world of American boxing. Evocative images reveal the pain, sacrifice, and discipline of the "sweet science" as well as the triumphs, tragedies, and big dreams of the men and women who practice it. A dozen essays by veteran boxing writers such as Katherine Dunn, Carlo Rotella, Kate Sekules, F. X. Toole, Lucius Shepard, Robert Anasi, Loic Wacquant, Joe Rein, and Ralph Wiley explore the community and culture of boxing gyms, an endangered American institution that serves not only as the training ground for the next generation of great fighters, but as a sanctuary in tough neighborhoods, a lifeline for troubled kids, and a repository of a centuries-old tradition of pugilistic knowledge.

176 pages, Hardcover

First published May 15, 2005

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Profile Image for Kimley.
201 reviews238 followers
February 18, 2008
My dad wrote one of the essays in this book so I have an obvious bias...

But I will say that the photos really are pretty powerful. You don't need to be a boxing fan to appreciate this.
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