Pound for Pound: A Biography of Sugar Ray Robinson

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Harper Collins, Jan 18, 2005 - Antiques & Collectibles - 316 pages

Hailed by Muhammad Ali as "the king, the master, my idol," Sugar Ray Robinson was the greatest boxer America had seen since Joe Louis and is considered by many today to be, pound for pound, the best boxer the sport has ever known. A world welterweight and five-time middleweight champion, he had a career that spanned three decades. With his graceful yet powerful style and Hollywood looks -- which he would use to his advantage upon his final retirement from boxing -- he embodied the very essence of the "sweet science." Before he finally hung up his boxing gloves in 1965, at the age of forty-four, Sugar Ray Robinson won 125 consecutive fights, including victories over Henry Armstrong, Kid Gavilan, Carmen Basilio, Jake LaMotta, Rocky Graziano, Gene Fullmer, and Randy Turpin. His successes were not his alone, however. They belonged to his family as well, though those relationships would be marked by neglect and abuse.

At a time still characterized by discrimination, his victories, like those of Jackie Robinson, represented victories for all black America. And they were all the more symbolic because of the place he chose to call home -- Harlem. Co-written with Robinson's son, Ray Robinson II, and thoroughly researched by Amsterdam News reporter Herb Boyd, Pound for Pound is not only a definitive portrait of an emotionally complex man and his family, it is also a portrait of Harlem at the apex of its creativity, a time when Miles Davis was playing at Minton's, Langston Hughes was writing his divine poetry, and a boy from Georgia originally named Walker Smith Jr. would take on the moniker "Sugar."

 

Contents

CHAPTER 2
17
Champion at Last
78
CHAPTER 12
92
Le Sucre Merveilleux in Paris
104
The St Valentines Day Massacre
114
Its Turpin Time
120
Bumpy Bobo and Rocky
133
Take It to the Maxim
139
CHAPTER 25
217
CHAPTER 26
223
Up Against the Mob
230
CHAPTER 28
237
Pound for Pound
241
CHAPTER 30
253
The Final Bell
263
Epilogue
268

CHAPTER 18
145
CHAPTER 19
157
The Perfect Punch
173
CHAPTER 21
179
Millie and the Mormon
199
CHAPTER 24
208
Sugars Ring Record
277
Interviews
289
Notes
291
Bibliography
301
Index
305
Copyright

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About the author (2005)

Herb Boyd is a journalist, activist, teacher, and author or editor of twenty-three books, including his latest, The Diary of Malcolm X, edited with Ilyasah Al-Shabazz, Malcolm X’s daughter. His articles have been published in the Black Scholar, Final Call, the Amsterdam News, Cineaste, Downbeat, the Network Journal, and the Daily Beast. A scholar for more than forty years, he teaches African American history and culture at the City College of New York in Harlem, where he lives. Ray Robinson II is an independent producer who is currently in the process of establishing a museum in honor of his mother and father.

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