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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Halberstam elevates sports to literature in ‘Everthing’

Mary Foster The Spokesman-Review

“Everything They Had”

by David Halberstam (Hyperion, 448 pages, $24.95)

Even if you have no interest in sports, you can enjoy David Halberstam’s graceful writing about them.

Halberstam, who was killed in a car crash last year at age 73, won a Pulitzer Prize in journalism in 1964 for his coverage of the Vietnam War, and was nominated as a finalist this year in the history category for “The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean War.”

He elevated any subject he tackled – war, politics, history, sports – with his eloquence and ability to find what was not obvious.

No one was better at combining narrative storytelling with reporting. His books read like good novels. Who else could have made it impossible to put down a book on a baseball team from decades past, or a group of rowers trying to make the 1984 Olympic squad?

That magic is at work in “Everything They Had,” a compilation of articles he wrote for various publications.

Halberstam covers the expected, such as baseball, football and basketball, as well as the esoteric – fishing, fencing, fitness – and why people are interested in sports beyond the betting line.

In “Sports as a Window of Social Change,” he talks about his dual roles as serious writer and sportswriter, saying that although the worlds rarely connect, “sports has been an excellent window through which to monitor changes in the rest of society.”

In “Baseball and the National Mythology,” he points out that “Washington is not the ideal spot for Camelot, and our politics are more given to venality, drudgery, boredom and frustration than to beautiful people and soaring ideas, so it is not surprising that we turn to sports for our myths.”

Writing about Michael Jordan at the peak of his career, Halberstam watches as the basketball star handles a crowd waiting for him to leave a hotel and board the Chicago Bulls bus. He describers Jordan as being in “Michael Mode,” smiling, signing autographs and moving quickly through the sea of loving fans.

“I have not seen fame like this in almost 30 years,” Halberstam writes, comparing Jordan to Elvis Presley, John Kennedy and Mick Jagger.

Then he goes on to point out that almost 45 years after Jackie Robinson broke the color line in major league sports, Jordan became one of only two black American athletes (the other was Magic Johnson) who had become true crossover heroes, beloved by both black and white fans.