Muhammad Ali’s Greatest Fight, By: Howard Bingham and Max Wallace

When it came to boxing, Muhammad Ali knew he was the greatest. He recognized his adversaries, and the whole world knew it. But that is a small part of what made Muhammad Ali famous. The greatest triumph of courage is to stand up for religion. His refusal to be drafted into the US Army and take part in the war against Vietnam risked a prison sentence, the loss of his Heavyweight Boxing Championship, his public diploma, and a lost career that inevitably made him a legend. in his own time.

Muhammad Ali The Greatest Fight intends to fight with the United States government as a conscious objector and his fight with the World Boxing Association to regain his confiscated boxing title. After a few introductory chapters covering his childhood and a brief history of boxing, the book’s main plot focuses on the ten-year period in which this happened… the 1960s.

If you have already read Thomas Hauser’s Muhammad Ali: His Life and Times you will find the sections quite repetitive. In fact, the entire paragraph is exactly the same. Some examples: from Hauser’s book, Chapter VII, entitled Exile – pages 181, 186, 187, and 192, a paragraph similar to the content of this book in Chapter VIII – inscribed Exile- on pages 189, 178, 190, and 202. But who. who does not care to read a hundred pages of his entire biography, but wants to understand the meaning of Muhammad Ali’s fame, this is a good book; briefly, concisely, and to the point abundantly about black Muslims, the Vietnam War protests, their connection to Malcolm X and their association with Jr. Martin Luther King, and Muhammad Ali’s religious faith and sincere concern for civil rights.

Rated 3 Stars.
Books 1 to 5. Books rated 1, rarely end. The book is rated 2, I usually finish it but would never recommend it to anyone. 5 is the highest rating.

 

 

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