Selected Product: | Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream Paperback Author: H. G. Bissinger, Buzz Bissinger Publisher: Harper Perennial Release Date: 1991-09 ISBN-10: 0060974060 ISBN-13: 9780060974060 List Price: $14.00 Average Customer Rating: | | Into the Wild ISBN-10: 0307387178 ISBN-13: 9780307387172 List Price:$13.95 Beer and Circus: How Big-Time College Sports Is Crippled Undergraduate Education ISBN-10: 0805068112 ISBN-13: 9780805068115 List Price:$17.00 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream by H. G. Bissinger, Buzz Bissinger (ISBN-10: 0060974060, ISBN-13: 9780060974060). At this time we have not yet written a review for Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream by H. G. Bissinger, Buzz Bissinger (ISBN-10: 0060974060, ISBN-13: 9780060974060). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com With frankness and compassion, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist H.G. Bissinger's national bestseller chronicles the dramatic 1988 season of the Permian Panthers--the winningest high school football team in Texas history. Friday Night Lights shows how the town's singleminded devotion to the team shapes the community and inspires (or shatters) the teenagers who wear the uniforms. Featured on "Sixty Minutes." 26 halftones. Another great sport story | Customer Rating: | | the city i play high school football in has a great football team, it also has money, shopping, and entertainment. but for the small town of odessa in west texas they only have two things, oil and that thing called football. with all of the oil running out i guess that leaves one thing left fooball!!! any highschool football player in the world would kill to have a fan base like the panthers do. this story tells about the panthers 1988 championship run. the football team overcomes a strict coaching staff, cocky teammates, and injuries to make it as far as possible against the toughest football teams in the nation. this story makes you want to go suit up and hit somebody. | A fantastic book | Customer Rating: | H.G. Bissenger's book Friday Night Lights is a non-fiction account of a football team in Odessa, Texas spanning the decade of the 1980s. A once financially successful town dependent on oil revenues, Odessa's fate makes an about turn as profits dwindle, families face bankruptcy, and the crime rate climbs, far exceeding the national average. Enter the Permain Panthers football team, a group that seems to be defying all odds, proving that determination and grit can bring hope and success to this small town. It goes without saying that just as surely the team can also bring the town to its knees if it fails to win the State Championship.
At an early age, children are indoctrinated into the faith known as the Permian High School Panthers Football Team, a religion that is followed just as fervently as any other. Boys pray that they will rise to the challenge and become the next star of the Pantheon Panthers, while girls dream of becoming a "Pipette," a glorified indentured servant whose sole obligation is to meet the needs of an adoring, or as the case may sometimes be, un-adoring, football player. When they shine, the players are treated much like Greek gods, but like those gods, their reign is brief, landing some in their own version of Hades.
Bissenger follows several players, and their coach, as they travel on a journey to the State Finals. Along the way, the star player, Boobie, sustains a knee injury and learns the hard way that not only is he expendable, but that all privileges once extended to him are no longer afforded. This is made abundantly clear when the once promising star realizes that he is now actually required to attend class to receive a passing grade. While some players do show academic promise, most are unprepared for the rigors ahead of them in the real world. These players live in an eery twilight zone, reinforced by adults obsessed with winning the next Friday night's game. Along with portraits of the players, Bissenger offers a sympathetic portrayal of the coach who tries to create a winning team against the backdrop of adolescent angst, and families struggling to stay intact against a rising tide of economic and emotional woes.
Bissenger doesn't focus his reporting solely within the boundaries of the football field, he also examines how football dominance intersects all other aspects of town governance. Bissenger explains how Permian High School, once the bastion of white middle and upper-middle-class families, gerrymanders town lines so that it can pick and choose its star athletes from less privileged areas. He also reports on how funding is disproportionately spent on the football team; making scholastic achievement a secondary function of the school system. Bissenger takes us to a court proceeding where a judge is asked to rule on whether a star athlete with a questionable passing grade in algebra is qualified to play in the next game. By the time you reach this point in the book, you will fully understand that in Odessa, a town where winning a game is everything, judgment will always favor the athlete. Whether the Panthers succeed in becoming champions or not, in the end, the season is over, the old players move on, and new players replace the old, and for a brief moment, they too are stars.
Quill says: A tale of the American Dream gone awry. A fantastic book. | Best Sports Book Ever Written | Customer Rating: | This is my pick for the best sports book ever written, and the reason is because it transcends sports. It captures the mood and feel of small town America as well as any book since Larry McMurtry's The LAST PICTURE SHOW. What Bissinger describes about the so-called pinnacle of life in western Texas, playing for the local team, applies just as well to high school athletes in Ohio or Pennsylvania. The flip side, of course, is once the ride is over, so is your worth to the community.
Great, great read. | long read | Customer Rating: | | Since I am not into football, this book was a long read for me. It could have been halved and the story complete. | Not sure what was worse | Customer Rating: | | Not sure what was worse, reading this 'item' or pounding my head against a concrete wall. It has received much fan-fare, and I don't know why, it's best described as...trite. |
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