The Review of Contemporary Fiction
More Than a Champion: The Style of Muhammad Ali by Jan Philipp ReemtsmaRott Krispen
Jan Philipp Reemtsma. More Than a Champion: The Style of Muhammad Ali. Trans. John E. Woods. Knopf, 1998. 172 pp. $21.00.
Lets use the cheese testers method for what goes on in commercial publishing, and here is the piece of cheese: Jan Philipp Reemtsmas More Than a Champion: The Style of Muhammad Ali, translated from the German by John E. Woods. The jacket says that Reemtsma is one of Europes most prominent intellectuals (usually when such claims are made, there is at least a hint as to what this is based on, e.g., the names of a few books the person has written: no such information about the author here). Well, lets see. The books 172 pages are primarily given over to accounts of Alis fights, written in a prose that resembles the worst of sports writing (Grantland Rice and Alfred E. Knopf must both be turning in their graves). Example: here is the opening line to the Ali-Frazier fight in Manila: A renewed hail of blows to Fraziers head. But Frazier wont let himself be driven to the ropes. But from this distinguished intellectual (excuse me, one of Europes most prominent), we also wax philosophical: We do not grow from defeat. We are destroyed by defeat . . . . Fortunately, these sophomoric remarks are rather limited, but perfectly fit with the books awful sports writing á la Bob Costas (that is, sports is not just a game, but is the game of life). The bad writing itself is surpassed perhaps only by the incredible strategy of using the Rocky films (and, yes, we get very detailed accounts of the movies) to explicate Ali. And all of this from some unknown German! Perhaps most incredible about this as a sports book is that it is all old, old, old news. Who at Knopf read the manuscript and accepted it for an American market? The Kirkus review accurately puts it this way: Very little of this is new, and one wonder[s] exactly why a distinguished European intellectual is so preoccupied with telling us a great deal that any ordinary boxing fan already knows. Why indeed. But the bigger question is who at Knopf decided this was a good book and should be published?
But there is also a disturbing thesis at work in the book (i.e., its intellectual side) which champions the isolated, heroic individual as opposed to the masses. Always a dangerous bent from any German. Are we perhaps talking about the super man? I suppose that we are to be reassured by Reemtsmas sympathetic portrayal of the black man in America (once again, he tells us nothing that isnt known, but manages to do so in a very condescending way). So here we have a German who understands black men in America? And Knopf thought this, when all rolled together, added up to a book it should publish? Herr Reemtsma should be strongly encouraged to limit himself to writing about Germans and Jews, and perhaps there he might have some knowledge worth sharing. Once again Kirkus: Whats good here isnt original, and whats original isnt good. And so why did Knopf publish this? [Rott Krispen]