The bestselling biography of Muhammad Ali--with an Introduction by
Salman Rushdie
On the night in 1964 that Muhammad Ali (then known as Cassius Clay)
stepped into the ring with Sonny Liston, he was widely regarded as an
irritating freak who danced and talked way too much. Six rounds later
Ali was not only the new world heavyweight boxing champion: He was "a
new kind of black man" who would shortly transform America's racial
politics, its popular culture, and its notions of heroism.
No one has captured Ali--and the era that he exhilarated and sometimes
infuriated--with greater vibrancy, drama, and astuteness than David
Remnick, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Lenin's Tomb (and
editor of The New Yorker). In charting Ali's rise from the gyms of
Louisville, Kentucky, to his epochal fights against Liston and Floyd
Patterson, Remnick creates a canvas of unparalleled richness. He gives
us empathetic portraits of wisecracking sportswriters and bone-breaking
mobsters; of the baleful Liston and the haunted Patterson; of an
audacious Norman Mailer and an enigmatic Malcolm X. Most of all, King
of the World does justice to the speed, grace, courage, humor, and
ebullience of one of the greatest athletes and irresistibly dynamic
personalities of our time.