Declare Books As North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1)

Original Title: North Dallas Forty (Hall of Fame Edition, No. 1)
ISBN: 0973144335 (ISBN13: 9780973144338)
Edition Language: English
Series: North Dallas Forty #1
Setting: Dallas, Texas(United States)
Books North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1) Free Download Online
North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1) Paperback | Pages: 314 pages
Rating: 3.89 | 1273 Users | 74 Reviews

Itemize Appertaining To Books North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1)

Title:North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1)
Author:Peter Gent
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 314 pages
Published:September 4th 2003 by Sport Media Publishing (first published 1973)
Categories:Sports. Fiction. Football. Novels. Humor. Media Tie In. Literary Fiction

Narrative During Books North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1)

"I never saw a guy having so much fun and crying at the same time."

Drugs, sex, exploitation, and alcohol provide the octane for 8 days in the life of Phil Elliott an aging wide receiver for a Dallas professional football team. Hunter S. Thompson would have been holding his hand up by day four saying take me out coach. I might have lasted two days. Elliott not only lasts the entire span, but shows up to football practice every day and plays a professional game by day seven. If anyone is looking to write a dissertation on drug use in the early 1970s this book would be a great place to start.

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Nick Nolte plays Phil Elliott in the 1979 movie

Nursing the aches and pains of an athlete quickly reaching his past due date Elliott relies heavily on legal and illegal drugs to keep his body and mind working. As Phil says to a trainer on the team. "I may have ten more years left in me if I could just master the chemistry of this game." He wasn't talking about the chemistry of the work place like the rest of us worry about. He was constantly experimenting with the proper dosages of a cornucopia of drugs to try and get through each day.

Phil can feel the end coming every time he straps on his cleats, every time he has another meaningless one night stand, and every time he wakes up feeling worse than when he went to sleep. He is in a constant state of survival. In fact Phil talks about that fact with the quarterback's girlfriend of the moment.

"He played a great game," she said, disappointed but not surprised by the thought that Maxwell was despondent.

"We didn't win," I pointed out.

"Does it matter that much?"

"To him it does."

"Not to you?" She seemed surprised.

"A little, I suppose. Mostly I'm just trying to survive." I was a little embarrassed by the drama in my statement.

"I'm just trying to get the job," I explained. "He worries about getting it done right, or what he things is right."

I paused for a minute and watched her fooling absently with is hair. "You really like him, don't you?" I observed.

"I really do," she said, keeping her eyes on Maxwell. There was a tone of hopelessness in her voice.

"Why?"

"Because he's a man," she said. "What I thought all men were supposed to be like."

"What about me?" I asked with mock indignity.

"You," she said, turning to look at me and smiling wryly. "You. You're what men really are. Like you said, just trying to survive."


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Dust Jacket cover of the Hardcover edition

Even though Elliott is always worried about retaining his spot on the team he can't keep his head down in fact he keeps getting into trouble with management due to his hijinks and his disrespectful tone. What Elliott wants is more control over his life and with no union and no real security except how well he played on Sunday he finds himself questioning if management even sees him as a human being.

"I'm too used to seeing myself on a list-six-foot-four-inch two-hundred-fifteen-pound flankerback, right alongside the six and seven-eighths helmets and the size thirteen shoes. No, man, I not only feel like a piece of equipment. I know I'm a piece of equipment."

I know it has become almost fashionable to be anti-union, but the only reason that we can feel comfortable getting rid of our unions is because they've done an excellent job making us all feel secure. In the process we forget what made us secure in the first place. Phil Elliott didn't really know it, but what he wanted was a union, something to offset the god like powers of NFL owners.

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Peter Gent

Peter Gent never played a down of college football. He was an outstanding basketball player for the Michigan State University. He turned down a pro NBA career (head scratching moment) and decided to show up to the Dallas Cowboys training camp when he heard they were offering $500 to anyone who showed up. Due to his athleticism he did make the team and contributed for a couple of years, but due to an accumulation of injuries his career was cut short. He passed away September 30th, 2011 from pulmonary disease.

I laughed out loud. I cringed. I felt Phil's fear and I wanted to put a restraining hand on his arm from time to time, but then nothing ever changes if someone isn't pushing the envelope trying to make not only the owners, but the players realize there is room for change. I was surprised at the profound impact this book had on me. Yes, it is a book about football, but actually very little football occurs. This book is more about the search for something more, for a life with meaning.



Rating Appertaining To Books North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1)
Ratings: 3.89 From 1273 Users | 74 Reviews

Assessment Appertaining To Books North Dallas Forty (North Dallas Forty #1)
Peter Gent's jarring Roman a clef about playing for the late-60s Dallas Cowboys still holds up well today. A no-holds-barred account on the violent life of an NFL athlete, it gives the reader pause for reflection that even in 2011, the players in the league are playing under less than optimal circumstances with their bodies as their only commodities.

I picked this up for less than a buck and read it as part of my read-myself-a-boyhood/manhood project. It's fiction but echoes Alex Karras's bio about the harsh realities of pro football in the 1960s. The misogyny, drugs, and physical brutality of the sport are intense. Definitely not the kind of manhood I have any interest in living.

Brutally honest and ultimately depressing. Gent tells it like it was, and probably still is...violent, sick, and real. The followup is a must if you come away from this battered like a wide receiver after a rough game. Absolutely remarkable and more than a small part responsible for my never pressuring my son to play sports...especially football.

Somethin' ElseI've read this book several times, and it seems to get better each time. It's depiction of life in the 60s is spot on, with the added insanity of professional sports. The ending is unforgettable.

*** Here Be Spoilers ***Peter Gent broke open the secretive world of pro football just as Jim Bouton's "Ball Four" had peeled back the horsehide of pro baseball. By the way, Gent, his last name, is pronounced with a hard G, as in 'gator' or 'gavel' (as he explained on an NPR interview since the interviewer commonly mistakenly used the soft G pronunciation as in 'gentleman'). Gent's path into the NFL was an odd one in that he didn't play college football but was an all-Big Ten basketball player

A ridiculously ambitious novel from a former Dallas Cowboys wide receiver (!) who I will always picture as Nick Nolte, in spite of the strange, wizard-like author photo on the back cover. This book is basically responsible for Any Given Sunday decades later, and, in fact, was made into its own oddly touching movie adaptation way back when. That movie lacks one important detail, however. Yes, I'm talking about the gory, action-packed, racially charged bloodbath of a conclusion. What the what???

Entertaining, but I feel like the author punted (excuse the pun) for the final quarter of the story, setting off a tragic set of events with no context.

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