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He perceived a bigger story beyond the game scores -- something he dubbed Jock Culture, which he saw as a defining aspect of American society. That might sound like a good thing because aren't professional athletes known for hard work and sacrifice? Yes, but people get old and bodies fail, and although athletes may be able to postpone the inevitable with performance-enhancing drugs, eventually they, too, will be used up and discarded. Jock Culture glorifies the young, the strong and the beautiful, and Lipsyte, the would-be Chekhov, gets the tragic implications. That's why his columns, and this marvelous memoir, "An Accidental Sportswriter," are so affecting. When readers would hector him about why his work was always so political, at first he put it off on his liberal parents. "Then I thought
-- now I always think -- why isn't everyone else's work more political?" ___ Online:
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