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Boxing Is My Sanctuary
By Ted Sares

Well known boxing writer Jim Amato states, “…This is the most heart felt boxing book I've read in years. Ted's perspective on the sport is absolutely endearing. To me he is the A.J. Liebling of our era. That is the highest compliment I can pay to a boxing writer and Ted has surely earned it. I highly recommend the book to any boxing fan. It is like walking through history, up close and personal”

Writer John Howard of the Ventura County Star had this to say: “The passion he displays is, I believe, unequaled and his enthusiasm for boxing can't be contained. At times, I could almost feel the words come alive and jump off the pages. The author has a story to tell and does a great job in bringing out the many fights he's attended. At times, I felt like I was right there with Ted and his dad, "Big John," feeling the hooks to the body, hearing the roar of the crowd, the smell of sweat and perfume, the taste of foamy Meister Brau, and the juicy Italian beef with roasted peppers.”

Harold Lederman said the “...the book brought back so many great memories. The author has an amazing memory. There were so many great stories and great names in the book that I had absolutely forgotten.”
Trainer and Author Brian Hughes says, “This is a 'must' book by Ted Sares. His vivid recolections are a bonus for all true boxing fans. It is both captivating and exciting. A book you will find hard to put down once you have started reading it. British boxing fans have been long time admirers of Mr Sares riviting articles”

Antiquities of the Ring says: “We rarely comment on any of the boxing books that we either help to promote or offer for sale, however in the case of Ted Sares' book I feel compelled to urge anyone interested in not just boxing but the pure stuff of which life is made to buy this book. Boxing Is My Sanctuary is a collection of short essays of the recollections and experiences of Ted Sares as an observer of the sport of boxing for a period of over half a century. But the book is much more than a "boxing book" it is superb prose written with the passion of poetry. This is the most engaging, well written book I have read in a long, long time no matter the subject. This is THE book of the year.”

Other writers, boxers and officials have high praise for the book as well.

Boxing is my Sanctuary can be purchased in book stores, through the web via Amazon, Borders or Barnes and Noble, or directly through IUniverse or the author, who can be reached at tedsares@roadrunner.com



BOOK REVIEW : BOXING IS MY SANCTUARY :
A Collection Of Essays by Theodore R. ( Ted ) Sares.
posted by Kathleen Holland on December 22, 2007, in Features
 

By Jim Amato
If you like boxing...If you love boxing...Then you will love this book. Ted " The Bull " Sares has a way of taking the sport of boxing to it's inner core. Stripped down, mano y mano. Ask no quarter, give no quarter.

This is a man who has followed boxing for years sharing his profound memories in words that make you feel that you are almost at ringside. Ted does not shy away from anything. He shares the courage of the fighters he writes about but he also shares the tragedy of some.

This is the most heart felt boxing book I've read in years. Ted's perspective on the sport is absolutely endearing. To me he is the A.J. Liebling of our era.That is the highest compliment I can pay to a boxing writer and Ted has surely earned it.
I highly recommend the book to any boxing fan. It is like walking through history, up close and personal.
Boxing Is My Sanctuary, by Theodore R. (Ted) Sares © 2007
 

By John Howard

Maybe we need to add a new name to the list of boxing writers out there today. Ted Sares can flat out write about boxing. Prior to the release of his book, Ted, a private investor by trade, has specialized in articles, essays and short stories. His book Boxing Is My Sanctuary is a lifetime of mostly first hand experiences he has encountered over the past 60 years and he describes them from a fan's perspective.
With its 56 chapters and 355 pages (and an amazing bibliography of 24 pages), It's hard to do the justice this book deserves in a short review. As well, it's difficult to dig deep enough into this encyclopedia of knowledge Ted has crafted. Boxing Is My Sanctuary is sure to become a source of reference for other boxing writers. As an example of how far he goes with the detail, does anyone remember James Miller, aka "The Fan Man" and what became of him?

And you have never heard food described until you read the way the author does it. I'm a non-smoker, but to hear Ted describe torching up one of his post-fight 60 Ring cigars makes me want to try one as well.
The passion he displays is, I believe, unequaled and his enthusiasm for boxing can't be contained. At times, I could almost feel the words come alive and jump off the pages. The author has a story to tell and does a great job in bringing out the many fights he's attended. At times, I felt like I was right there with Ted and his dad, "Big John," feeling the hooks to the body, hearing the roar of the crowd, the smell of sweat and perfume, the taste of foamy Meister Brau, and the juicy Italian beef with roasted peppers.

I actually choked up when the author spoke of the "bonding" (a word not used back then) between he and his father in one of the early 50's fights. The chapter, "Getting Hooked," brought back memories of my father and I bonding back in the early days of an Angel's baseball game. "This is no poetic rite of passage; this was plain old manly stuff," says the author. Only stuff a father and son could understand.
As an advocate for the sport, I felt the emotion and anger when the author describes the troubling beating ex-heavyweight Jerry Quarry suffered in an ill advised comeback at the age of 47. Quarry left the ring that night with broken teeth, cuts over his eyes, a battered brain, and $1,050 in prize money. The fight never should have happened (a black eye for the sport of boxing). Ted's outspoken advocacy for boxing reform is evident, though he is a realist and has no illusions as to what is needed.

The kid in Ted emerges when he discusses his favorite fighter, Bob Satterfield. While the other kids idolized Joe Louis, Ted could quote the stats of "Rapid Robert" off the top of his head. Others knew about Ted Williams, but Ted knew about Ike Williams. I could tell he was fuming when he wrote about the recent film "Resurrecting The Champ." This was a film loosely based on a written account by J.R. Moehringer that appeared in the Los Angeles Times Magazine about Moehringer befriending a fighter who claimed to be Bob Satterfield. "When you make a film based on a true story, albeit a true story about a lie, you raise the likelihood of misrepresentation five-fold," said Ted. Ted didn't want anyone to confuse in any way the legacy of his idol, Bob Satterfield, with that of Tommy Harrison, the homeless ex-fighter claiming to be Satterfield.

Boxing Is My Sanctuary is an chronological sequence of essays full of great information. The journey takes us from the mid-40's to the present. You'll revisit the end of WWII, past presidents, a Duck's Ass haircut, Malcolm X and the Black Muslim Movement, Hurricane Katrina, and countless boxing matches in-between. Ted's uniquely crafted Top 100 fighters since 1950 is a well thought out list that includes some interesting surprises.

In his quest for the truth, the author leaves no rock unturned no matter what's underneath. And in the sport of boxing — with its cast of unsavory characters — it's no telling what you might find hidden there. If it's there, Ted has found it. Guaranteed


See interesting book-cover notes at link below:
 
http://www.jackbacon.com/products/details.asp?PDID=112
 
The book is also available at www.amazon.com, www.sundancebookstore.com or www.jackbacon.com 
 
Guy can be reached for interviews at gclifton@rgj.com
 
Alan Hopper
Don King Productions
 
 

Jack Dempsey’s first trip to Nevada came as he clung to the underbelly of a train, a dangerous practice known as “riding the rods” and utilized by those too poor to purchase a ticket for one of the passenger cars.  In later years, Dempsey, the heavyweight boxing champion from 1919 to 1926, returned to a hero’s welcome with newspapermen, children and divorcees following his every move.

 

 

Many people are surprised to learn that Dempsey once called Nevada home. Little remains to commemorate that time other than the yellowed archives of Nevada newspapers and the memories of a handful of old-timers. The fact is, Dempsey left footprints all over the Silver State.

 

 

Dempsey In Nevada is an untold chapter in Nevada’s history and an untold story in the life of one of the great sports figures of the 20th Century.

 

 

Dempsey helped usher in the era referred to as “The Golden Age of Sport.” Along with baseball’s Babe Ruth, football’s Red Grange, golf’s Bobby Jones and tennis’ Bill Tilden, Dempsey was a giant of the era and made more money in a single fight than all the others combined. Babe Ruth’s largest salary with the Yankees was $85,000. Dempsey made $717,000 for his first fight with Gene Tunney.  He lost his fortune in the stock market crash of 1929 and set about reclaiming it with Reno as his base in the early 1930s, first as a fight promoter and then, once again, as a fighter as he set out to reclaim the heavyweight championship.

 

 

“Guy Clifton’s meticulously researched and wonderfully illustrated volume captures virtually everything you wanted to know about boxing great Jack Dempsey in Nevada,” said Nevada State Archivist Guy Rocha.

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Guy Clifton, a third generation Nevadan, has been a sportswriter since 1982, receiving state, regional and national awards for his writing.  He is currently a senior reporter for the Reno Gazette-Journal. Dempsey in Nevada is his fourth book. He has also written “Reno Rodeo: A History,” and two volumes of “You Know You’re A Nevadan If …”

 

   

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