Tim Mack book "Above and Beyond" available
Posted: Wed Sep 24, 2008 2:24 pm
Hey everyone!
Just wanted to let everyone know that my book, "Above and Beyond:Tim Mack, the pole vault, the quest for Olympic Gold," is available for pre-order at amazon.com and at kentstateuniversitypress.com. It took awhile to get printed, but finally is here. Bill Livingston, the author, and I talked on the phone every week for 8-10 months to get this story out there. The rest of the time was trying to find a publisher. You will find the price from 17.99 to 26.95. the books are printed, so shouldn't take long to get one.
The story tells the path I followed en route to Olympic Gold. Aside from talking to me, Bill talked to many other vaulters...Bob Seagren, Don Bragg, Sergey Bubka, Toby Stevenson, and more to get their personal experiences and their views of the event. The story tells the path I followed en route to Olympic Gold and my thoughts along the way. It tells of odd jobs, struggles and decisions along the way. It tells of coaches, family and friends...each adding something to the experience. Its a book that also puts everyones ideas and experiences out there for all to see.
Everyone has a story, not everyone follows the same path, but there is something everyone can take from this book. It is a book that tells that there is never one way to get what you want. If you really want something and are willing to do whatever it takes, no matter how strange it seems, no matter how unconventional it seems, no matter how ridiculous it seems, you will get it!!
thanks,
mack
Here is an explanation of the book:
Overcoming the odds to win the gold
Two Olympic medalists were recognized at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, days before Christmas 2004. One was the Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James, the “Chosen One” of the NBA. He had a bronze medal from the Athens games that summer. The other was a Cleveland homeboy too, a gold medalist who had flown higher than anyone before on the Olympic stage. Hardly anyone knew his name. He was Tim Mack.
His high school coach did not see anything particularly promising in the young pole–vaulter. Mack never made it to the state meet, and he was the first to admit he had a fear of heights. But thanks to his unflinching determination and confidence, Mack went on to prove that he was anything but mediocre. In 2004 the young athlete won the Olympic gold medal for pole vaulting. His jump of 19 feet 6–1/4 inches was not only Mack’s personal best but the highest in Olympic history.
Award-winning sports columnist Bill Livingston follows Mack as he practices one of the world’s most dangerous and demanding sports. Livingston reveals the fascinating subculture of pole vaulting—from Bob Richards, the only man to win Olympic gold twice in pole vaulting; to Sergey Bubka, the most controversial pole vaulter ever; to Don Bragg, a rowdy Tarzan-like character who swung on ropes in his backyard to build upper-body strength; to the stirring duel between Mack and Toby Stevenson as they battled for gold in Athens.
Readers will discover how Mack struggled and endured, while working in a factory, as a mascot in a bumblebee costume, and as a janitor, and how Mack changed his training and revamped his body and mind in a three-year program that made his AOL username, Goldnathens, a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Bill Livingston tells the story with the same grace, wit, and taste for colorful details that he has brought to the pages of the Cleveland Plain Dealer as senior sports columnist since 1984. He has covered five Summer and two Winter Olympics, as well as the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals, Stanley Cup Finals, Indianapolis 500, Daytona 500, NCAA Final Four, all major college bowl games, and all four golf major tournaments
Just wanted to let everyone know that my book, "Above and Beyond:Tim Mack, the pole vault, the quest for Olympic Gold," is available for pre-order at amazon.com and at kentstateuniversitypress.com. It took awhile to get printed, but finally is here. Bill Livingston, the author, and I talked on the phone every week for 8-10 months to get this story out there. The rest of the time was trying to find a publisher. You will find the price from 17.99 to 26.95. the books are printed, so shouldn't take long to get one.
The story tells the path I followed en route to Olympic Gold. Aside from talking to me, Bill talked to many other vaulters...Bob Seagren, Don Bragg, Sergey Bubka, Toby Stevenson, and more to get their personal experiences and their views of the event. The story tells the path I followed en route to Olympic Gold and my thoughts along the way. It tells of odd jobs, struggles and decisions along the way. It tells of coaches, family and friends...each adding something to the experience. Its a book that also puts everyones ideas and experiences out there for all to see.
Everyone has a story, not everyone follows the same path, but there is something everyone can take from this book. It is a book that tells that there is never one way to get what you want. If you really want something and are willing to do whatever it takes, no matter how strange it seems, no matter how unconventional it seems, no matter how ridiculous it seems, you will get it!!
thanks,
mack
Here is an explanation of the book:
Overcoming the odds to win the gold
Two Olympic medalists were recognized at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, days before Christmas 2004. One was the Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James, the “Chosen One” of the NBA. He had a bronze medal from the Athens games that summer. The other was a Cleveland homeboy too, a gold medalist who had flown higher than anyone before on the Olympic stage. Hardly anyone knew his name. He was Tim Mack.
His high school coach did not see anything particularly promising in the young pole–vaulter. Mack never made it to the state meet, and he was the first to admit he had a fear of heights. But thanks to his unflinching determination and confidence, Mack went on to prove that he was anything but mediocre. In 2004 the young athlete won the Olympic gold medal for pole vaulting. His jump of 19 feet 6–1/4 inches was not only Mack’s personal best but the highest in Olympic history.
Award-winning sports columnist Bill Livingston follows Mack as he practices one of the world’s most dangerous and demanding sports. Livingston reveals the fascinating subculture of pole vaulting—from Bob Richards, the only man to win Olympic gold twice in pole vaulting; to Sergey Bubka, the most controversial pole vaulter ever; to Don Bragg, a rowdy Tarzan-like character who swung on ropes in his backyard to build upper-body strength; to the stirring duel between Mack and Toby Stevenson as they battled for gold in Athens.
Readers will discover how Mack struggled and endured, while working in a factory, as a mascot in a bumblebee costume, and as a janitor, and how Mack changed his training and revamped his body and mind in a three-year program that made his AOL username, Goldnathens, a self-fulfilling prophecy.
Bill Livingston tells the story with the same grace, wit, and taste for colorful details that he has brought to the pages of the Cleveland Plain Dealer as senior sports columnist since 1984. He has covered five Summer and two Winter Olympics, as well as the Super Bowl, World Series, NBA Finals, Stanley Cup Finals, Indianapolis 500, Daytona 500, NCAA Final Four, all major college bowl games, and all four golf major tournaments