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US Mall 1 - Boys Will Be Boys: The Glory Days and Party Nights of the Dallas Cowboys Dynasty

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List Price: $75.99
Our Price: $47.87
Your Save: $ 28.12 ( 37% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Tantor Media
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD Dewey Decimal Number: 796 EAN: 9781400140732 Format: Audiobook ISBN: 1400140730 Label: Tantor Media Manufacturer: Tantor Media Number Of Items: 11 Publication Date: 2008-12-01 Publisher: Tantor Media Studio: Tantor Media
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Best Book I Have Read In A Long Time Comment: I loved this book. I am slightly biased as a Cowboys Fan, but I had an extremely hard time putting this book down. I have read other sports books over the Florida Gators (other favorite team) and other sports and teams. But this is the only book I put off plans to do other things to read. Once you open up with the story of the end, and then go through the understanding of the players, coaches, and owner of the Cowboys of the 1990's. I thought I knew this team, but now I know the team.
This might be the best book I have ever read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Enjoyable Voyeuristic read Comment: First off - do not purchase this book for your child thinking "He likes football - here is something he will like". No. This book is a true inside look into the locker room & private (formerly private) lives of NFL prima donna's. Lot's of stories about everything available to NFL superstars and how they partake in the drugs, alcohol & women that are thrown at them. A fun read - but not suitable for a younger person.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Loved it! Comment: I highly recommend this book to anyone who: a) was a big fan of the early 90's Cowboys, b) is curious about what goes on behind the scenes in the NFL, or c) is interested in the impact leadership has on organizations. This book comes up juicy in all three categories.
This book is great because it avoids the common mistake made by authors documenting certain teams. Instead of going through the boring minutiae of old games, Jeff Pearlman gives gripping, inside stories that no fan ever knew about. For example:
- Michael Irvin was the heart and soul of the team. Period.
- Nobody liked Emmitt Smith.
- Charles Haley, WTF?
- The players, for as much as they hated Jimmy Johnson, respected the heck out of him. How he shaped them psychologically and then kept them on the edge was stellar.
- Jerry Jones is a prideful retard, sure. But I never knew he was that big of one.
- Switzer was actually a pretty likable guy with whom you can really empathize. But, man, he really had no business being there.
- Skip Bayless is a massive dork.
I had a blast reading this book. Highly recommend.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Sometimes you don't want to know how sausage is made Comment: I love the Dallas Cowboys. I am like one of those people that stays in an abusive relationship. I just keep watching them year after year.
I think any Cowboy fan will be unable to put the book down. Anyone who hates the Cowboys may love this book even more!
There is a lot more here than a sports story.
This has a seamy underside that pretty much destroys any Cowboy idol worship that may be going on...yet there is something uplifting in it somehow. Tragedy and comedy.
Sort of a story of how some good can things come from completely flawed, totally depraved men.
There is much to be learned from this story if you are a teacher, a leader, anyone in charge of others even if you know nothing about football.
Customer Rating:      Summary: I thought Nothing Could Surprise Me! Comment: Being a life-long Cowboys fan, I begged my school librarian to order this book so I could read it immediately! After reading it, I told her to put it in the 'Adults Only' section - in other words, don't even let students know we have it! To learn the amount of money wasted by players and coaches on Superbowl-week partying was bad enough; to learn how much of it was condoned and even led by Jerry Jones was sickening.
The book itself is well written and painstakingly researched, although there are some glaring exceptions: it is about the Dynasty led by Troy, Emmitt, and Michael, yet Troy does not seem to have been involved. The stories that are about him come from others and those are few and far between. Although Troy is praised, it is done in such a manner as to put him down at the same time, probably because his antics were not anywhere near as colorful as the others. Case in point: he expected professional play on the field and would chew out players for screwing up; then was called racist by some (one). Doesn't that just sound awful - expecting highly paid professionals to get it right? Even though the author admits that what was said about Troy was unfair and he even quotes Charles Haley in Troy's defense, he still included it, even though he knew it was a)unfair and b)not true about Troy's character. Another shot at Troy: repeating the Skip Bayless assertion about Troy's sexual orientation.
About half-way through, the book gets bogged down, almost as though the writer felt the need to stretch it out in order to make it book-length. Something that would have helped - more photos. As it stands, there is one very small section of photos.
I am still a die-hard cowboys fan, but I am disillusioned by the behavior - my glasses are no longer rose-colored. What this book did for me more than anything else, was to prove how meddlesome Jerry Jones is and how badly the Cowboys (and probably every team) needed the discipline of Jimmy Johnson and more recently Bill Parcells.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Best Book I Have Read In A Long Time Comment: I loved this book. I am slightly biased as a Cowboys Fan, but I had an extremely hard time putting this book down. I have read other sports books over the Florida Gators (other favorite team) and other sports and teams. But this is the only book I put off plans to do other things to read. Once you open up with the story of the end, and then go through the understanding of the players, coaches, and owner of the Cowboys of the 1990's. I thought I knew this team, but now I know the team.
This might be the best book I have ever read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Enjoyable Voyeuristic read Comment: First off - do not purchase this book for your child thinking "He likes football - here is something he will like". No. This book is a true inside look into the locker room & private (formerly private) lives of NFL prima donna's. Lot's of stories about everything available to NFL superstars and how they partake in the drugs, alcohol & women that are thrown at them. A fun read - but not suitable for a younger person.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Loved it! Comment: I highly recommend this book to anyone who: a) was a big fan of the early 90's Cowboys, b) is curious about what goes on behind the scenes in the NFL, or c) is interested in the impact leadership has on organizations. This book comes up juicy in all three categories.
This book is great because it avoids the common mistake made by authors documenting certain teams. Instead of going through the boring minutiae of old games, Jeff Pearlman gives gripping, inside stories that no fan ever knew about. For example:
- Michael Irvin was the heart and soul of the team. Period.
- Nobody liked Emmitt Smith.
- Charles Haley, WTF?
- The players, for as much as they hated Jimmy Johnson, respected the heck out of him. How he shaped them psychologically and then kept them on the edge was stellar.
- Jerry Jones is a prideful retard, sure. But I never knew he was that big of one.
- Switzer was actually a pretty likable guy with whom you can really empathize. But, man, he really had no business being there.
- Skip Bayless is a massive dork.
I had a blast reading this book. Highly recommend.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Sometimes you don't want to know how sausage is made Comment: I love the Dallas Cowboys. I am like one of those people that stays in an abusive relationship. I just keep watching them year after year.
I think any Cowboy fan will be unable to put the book down. Anyone who hates the Cowboys may love this book even more!
There is a lot more here than a sports story.
This has a seamy underside that pretty much destroys any Cowboy idol worship that may be going on...yet there is something uplifting in it somehow. Tragedy and comedy.
Sort of a story of how some good can things come from completely flawed, totally depraved men.
There is much to be learned from this story if you are a teacher, a leader, anyone in charge of others even if you know nothing about football.
Customer Rating:      Summary: I thought Nothing Could Surprise Me! Comment: Being a life-long Cowboys fan, I begged my school librarian to order this book so I could read it immediately! After reading it, I told her to put it in the 'Adults Only' section - in other words, don't even let students know we have it! To learn the amount of money wasted by players and coaches on Superbowl-week partying was bad enough; to learn how much of it was condoned and even led by Jerry Jones was sickening.
The book itself is well written and painstakingly researched, although there are some glaring exceptions: it is about the Dynasty led by Troy, Emmitt, and Michael, yet Troy does not seem to have been involved. The stories that are about him come from others and those are few and far between. Although Troy is praised, it is done in such a manner as to put him down at the same time, probably because his antics were not anywhere near as colorful as the others. Case in point: he expected professional play on the field and would chew out players for screwing up; then was called racist by some (one). Doesn't that just sound awful - expecting highly paid professionals to get it right? Even though the author admits that what was said about Troy was unfair and he even quotes Charles Haley in Troy's defense, he still included it, even though he knew it was a)unfair and b)not true about Troy's character. Another shot at Troy: repeating the Skip Bayless assertion about Troy's sexual orientation.
About half-way through, the book gets bogged down, almost as though the writer felt the need to stretch it out in order to make it book-length. Something that would have helped - more photos. As it stands, there is one very small section of photos.
I am still a die-hard cowboys fan, but I am disillusioned by the behavior - my glasses are no longer rose-colored. What this book did for me more than anything else, was to prove how meddlesome Jerry Jones is and how badly the Cowboys (and probably every team) needed the discipline of Jimmy Johnson and more recently Bill Parcells.
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