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Days of
Grace: A Memoir by Arthur Ashe & Arnold Rampersad
A remarkable and inspiring
memoir by a remarkable and inspiring human geing: Arthur Ashe, embodiment of courage
and grace in every aspect of his life, from his triumphs as a great tennis champion
and his determined social activism to his ordeal in the face of death, a casualty
of AIDS. Ashe brings us into his childhood in Richmond, Virginia, where
he was born in 1943, whe his mother died when he was six, and where he was raised
by a loving but demanding father who set before his son the goals of self-reliance,
discipline, and responsibility. He recalls his exit from the then segregated South
and his entry into the world of tennis: a black intruder in an all-white enclave,
experiencing from the start every variety of rude or "polite" exclusion
and yet becoming, despite it, one of his generation's great players. He takes
us inside the tennis world of his championship years and his captaincy of the
Cavis Cup team. He describes the full emotional shock of the discovery
in 1988, in the aftermath of a brain operation, of his infection with AIDS - an
infection that was traced back to a transfusion after a heart bypass operation
in 1983. He tells what took place when he confided his condition to his wife and
to a few close friends and colleagues. And he fully recounts for the first time
what happened when, in April 1992, the possibility of a newspaper report forced
him to reveal his illness to the world, the ordeal that ensued, and his feelings
about it. We see how, during the last five years of his life, Ashe devoted
the brilliance and strength that had made him a great tennis champion to the championship
of great causes: justice for black men and women, the fight against all prejudice,
the battle against AIDS, and active opposition to South Africa's apartheid and
to US policy toward Haitians seeking asylum here. With a quiet and moving
openness Ashe talks about the athlete's life and about his contemporaries on the
tennis court, among them Billie Jean King, Jimmy Connors, and John McEnroe. He
gives us vivid images of the separate worlds of men and women on the tour. He
addresses straightforwardly the subject of sexual promiscuity in the world of
professional sport and the controversies over educational standards for college
athletes. He tells us about the burden of race he felt throughout his
life, about the comfort he found in his religion and in the spiritual life, about
his passionate devotion to his wife and daughter, about the people he has known,
about himself. This is the story of a life too soon ended - a memoir
that will endure. Hardbound in very good condition.
A hand-written inscription on the front fly sheet.
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