Winner of the 2019 PEN/ESPN Award for Literary Sports Writing
"The Circuit is the best sports book I've read in years, maybe ever." --Rich Cohen, author of The Chicago Cubs and Monsters
"As sports writing goes,
The Circuit is unusual in the very best way. Rowan Ricardo Phillips writes with such fluidity, and packs the book with bursts of brilliance. This is a compulsively readable guide to one truly Homeric year of professional tennis." --John Green, author of
The Fault in Our Stars An energetic, lyrical, genre-defying account of the 2017 tennis season.
In
The Circuit: A Tennis Odyssey, the award-winning poet--and
Paris Review sports columnist--Rowan Ricardo Phillips chronicles 2017 as seen through the unique prism of its pivotal, revelatory, and historic tennis season. The annual tennis schedule is a rarity in professional sports in that it encapsulates the calendar year. And like the year, it's divided into four seasons, each marked by a final tournament: the Grand Slams.
Phillips charts the year from winter's Australian Open, where Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal renewed their rivalry in a match for the ages, to fall's U.S. Open. Along the way, Phillips paints a new, vibrant portrait of tennis, one that captures not only the emotions, nerves, and ruthless tactics of the point-by-point game but also the quicksilver movement of victory and defeat on the tour, placing that sense of upheaval within a broader cultural and social context. Tennis has long been thought of as an escapist spectacle: a bucolic, separate bauble of life.
The Circuit will convince you that you don't leave the world behind as you watch tennis--you bring it with you.
Author: Rowan Ricardo PhillipsPublisher: Picador USA
Published: 12/10/2019
Pages: 256
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.50lbs
Size: 8.20h x 5.30w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9781250234926
ISBN10: 1250234921
BISAC Categories:-
Sports & Recreation |
Racket Sports | Tennis-
Sports & Recreation |
HistoryAbout the Author
Rowan Ricardo Phillips is the author of Heaven (FSG, 2015) and The Ground (FSG, 2012). He is the recipient of a Whiting Writers' Award, the PEN/Joyce Osterweil Award, and the GLCA New Writers Award for Poetry, and of a Guggenheim Fellowship. He lives in New York City.