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| Champion:
The Story of Muhammad Ali
Velasquez's lush oils dominate the page in monumental
fashion. They
frequently appear as montages or in sequences of stop-action
frames, for a truly
cinematic effect.
- Kirkus
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Haskins (The Story of Stevie Wonder) and Velasquez (Grandma's
Records) pay
tribute to Muhammad Ali in this rather adoring yet noteworthy
biography, which
brings to light the boxing great's many types of triumphs.
The author knows how
to interest kids, tracing the fighter's career to his 12th
birthday, when the
theft of his new bicycle made him want to find the thief and
beat him up; as
Haskins tells it, a policeman advised him "that he had
better learn how to
fight first" and offered the boy boxing lessons at his
gym. The hero is not
invulnerable: then known as Cassius Clay, he was so afraid
of flying that he bought
his own parachute and wore it during the flight to the 1960
Summer Olympics
in Rome. Haskins recaps familiar highlights of Ali's life
and career, including
his decision to join the Nation of Islam (and his later embrace
of world
Islam); the loss of his title as world heavyweight champion
when he refused, on
religious grounds, to fight in the Vietnam War; his remarkable
1974 win over
George Foreman to regain the crown; his experience with Parkinson's;
and his
surprise appearance as the final torch-bearer at the 1996
Summer Olympics in
Atlanta. A liberal sprinkling of Ali's famous rhymes provides
additional insight
into his personality. Velasquez does justice to the subject
with his
imaginatively conceived oil paintings; sometimes these approach
a photographic crispness,
sometimes they suggest Ali's inner victories and struggles.
Informative and
inspiring.
- Publishers Weekly
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