I told BrianS I would pick up the book day post. Â The wife and kids are out of town for the weekend so I figured I could fit this in between cleaning the garage, raking leaves, trimming bushes, trimming trees, etc.
I recently finished "Paterno" by Joe Posnanski. Â I'm not a big college football fan. Â I'm not a big non-fiction fan. Â I am a big Posnanski fan although I was disappointed in both of his first two books. Â This book had an uphill battle to win me over.
I wasn't really sure how this Paterno book would go. Â Poz works best when he is telling feel-good stories and I think he made it pretty apparent that he was a Paterno fan-boy. Â He didn't sign up to write this kind of story.
Despite the challenges, Poz did a great job with this book. Â It starts out a little slow with Paterno's Brooklyn upbringing. Â But that focus on his upbringing, and the emphasis on doing something special, helps us not only to understand his achievements but also his shortcomings.
In the end, I didn't feel hatred towards Paterno. Â I felt disappointed. Â I felt he was deeply flawed. Â I also felt that he did really want to do good things with his life. Â Somewhere along the line, I think Coach Paterno took over and Joe Paterno no longer existed. Â The best line in the book was this one - "It is hard for any man, even a plainspoken Brooklyn kid determined never to lose his bearings, to hold on to what matters when people start to see him as a saint."
So, what are you reading?