Author of "My Losing Season", one of my favorite sports-themed books of all time, as well as "The Water is Wide" ("Conrack") "The Lords of Discipline" and a numer of other first rate books. If you haven't read My Losing Season, I recommend it to you highly.
Z, I have to agree about
My Losing Season. I put it alongside Feinsteins's
The Last Amateurs as books that fans like us should read.
I was hesitant at first to read it because I expected it to be a re-hash of the experiences he had suffered through battling with his father (The Great Santini) about how to play the game, but instead it wound up highlighting what it is, and for many of us what it has been, to be a part of a team struggling to be better than they really are.
The
losing part is not really what his story is about. Learning to play with and then rely on your teammates in trying circumstances informed the rest of his life and I've got to say that when I read it I was forced to remember how the one losing season my team suffered in college taught me more about perserverance and courage than had the victories of the other three seasons combined.
Conroy was resilient (he survived the childhood beatings and humiliations), courageous(he stood up for Civil Rights during the movement's most difficult period in his native South Carolina), and very particularly a Southern intellectual (read his
My Reading Life) and for me he was a man of my own generation who witnessed the same events I did at a similar age.
Steven King is only one year his junior and juxtaposing King's autobiographical work (
The Body, Hearts in Atlantis, On Writing) with Conroy's remembrances paints a parallel but very different picture of their childhoods spent in the fifties and of their coming of age in the sixties.
Growing up and being educated in the Northeast I found myself drawn to identifying with King's experiences in rural Maine as a child of the working class, but it was Conroy's take on those years that offered me a perspective that I would not have found on my own.
Good writer, interesting man, and a voice that will be missed.