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Love, Zac: Small-Town Football and the Life and Death of an American Boy
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48/99
Critics
39/99
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Scholars
82/99
Rating
15/99
Volume
52/99
Rating
26/99
Volume
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About This Book
"I just can't live with this pain anymore," were among the final words in the diary of Zac Easter, a young man from small-town Iowa. In December 2015, Zac decided to take his own life rather than continue his losing battle against the traumatic brain injuries he had sustained as a no-holds-barred high school football player. In this deeply reported and powerfully moving true story, award-winning sportswriter Reid Forgrave speaks to Zac's family, friends, and coaches; he explores Zac's tightly knit, football-obsessed Midwestern community; he interviews cutting-edge brain scientists, psychologists, and sports historians; and he takes a deep dive into the triumphs and sins of the sports entertainment industry. Forgrave shows us how football mirrors America, from the fighting spirit it has helped inscribe in our national character to the problematic side effects of traditional notions of manhood that it affirms. But, above all, this is a story of how one young man's obsession with football led him and many of those entrusted with his care to ignore the warning signs of CTE until it was too late. What do Zac's life and death mean for a society addicted to a sport that can be thrilling and character forming but also dangerous and sometimes tragic for those who play it? Eye-opening, important, and ultimately inspiring, Love, Zac challenges us to think carefully about the ideals and values we as a nation want to instill in future generations.
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Reviews
"Forgrave adds a poignant intimacy to Zac's tragedy by interweaving it with portions of Zac's journal and personal correspondences."
"Along the way, Forgrave weaves a cultural history of football in America ..."
"In the future, families will be confronting whether their children should participate in football — and, if yes, at what age the participation should commence."
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