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Evel (2011)

by Leigh Montville(Favorite Author)
3.75 of 5 Votes: 1
ISBN
0385527454 (ISBN13: 9780385527453)
languge
English
publisher
Doubleday
review 1: In a nutshell....Evel Knievel was one-of-a-kind. You could say he was an innovator. You could also say he was a swindler. You could say he inspired a generation of kids. You could also say he was the epitome of a hypocrite.Regardless of what you may think...Evel Knievel is a name synonymous with the 1970's and the wild, crazy living of the times.A couple quick quotes from the book that stuck with me..."Robert Craig Knievel was a one-man tidal wave when he came through more ordinary lives.""There was a reason why toymakers always favored cartoon superheroes over real-life people: the cartoon characters never grew old, never lost their powers, never drank bourbon, never claimed to have slept with eight different women in a day, never whacked their former publicist with a... more baseball bat, never went to jail."How's that for painting a picture?I was amazed at just how crazy, irresponsible, rude, uncaring and just all around self-centered Evel Knievel was. I was equally amazed at how much I felt sorry for the guy by the end of this book.He played the hand he was dealt and in the end seemed to have a lot of regrets. If I met this guy at the bar in his heyday...I'd probably be disgusted by his antics. But what's odd is that I was completely embroiled in his story. Faults and all.Frankly, this guy has no redeeming qualities. He swindled more people out of money than anyone else I've ever read about. He cheated on his wife (how she ever stayed with him for over 35 years is beyond me) constantly. He bet on anything and everything. He had a God complex. He commanded the attention of every room he stepped in. And rules meant nothing to him.So why do I care about this guy?I'm at a loss. Maybe it's because my memories of him prior to reading this book were of the iconic jumps he performed when I was a kid. Maybe it was because I connect more with the wind-up toy than I do with the fatally flawed character in this book.Maybe deep down (real deep), he is a good person.Whatever it is, I found his story to be an interesting one.This book's biggest struggle is the fact it was written in 2011 and the author never got to interview Evel himself. All the info was taken from other sources and interviews conducted with friend, family and associates. That said, it's a pretty complete account of his life in my opinion.It's a very slow starter of a book. The first 2-3 chapters don't hardly even mention Knievel. It's all setting the scene. His hometown of Butte, Montana back in the 30's and 40's. Basically the life he was brought into and was raised in (a huge reason he became the person he did).It picked up steam in the middle chapters and some of the stories are pretty amazing. The stunts, the injuries, the flaws.The last few chapters really reveal who Evel Knievel was. Spending time in jail, his injuries catching up to him and his eventual death in 2007. He entered the world quietly and exited with an equal whimper.But the story in between was worth the read. If you remember the name Evel Knievel, this would be a good read for you.
review 2: This book has two niches--one as a document of American hucksterism, similar to a book about PT Barnum or Col. Tom Parker, and one as a riveting historical document to whoever happened to be an adolescent boy in the 1970s. I fall into the later group. My interest was further picqued because I recall so little of actual Evel Knievel. I caught him a time or two on Saturday afternoon TV, but I didn't know how to see the jump over (into) Snake River or some of his more famous stunts. That didn't stop Evel from being a daily topic of conversation, especially with any buddy who happened to own their own Evel stuntcycle. So the play by play of the Snake River jump is probably boring minutiae to most--I was on the edge of my seat. That Evel turns out to be a boor, misogynist, hypocrite, felon, etc, is of little consequence--he mainly lived in our minds as a little rubber figure who had no fear. less
Reviews (see all)
Holden
Was really looking forward to this one, but I feel like this bio. only scratched the surface.
alisawoahh
Another cherished childhood idol down the drain! A lying, thieving, wife beating narcissist!
agenbite
Great history of my generation's greatest hero! Who really shouldn't have been.
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