Late to the Ball: Age. Learn. Fight. Love. Play Tennis. Win.
by Gerald Marzorati
Scribner
Hardcover
From the publisher's website:
An award-winning author shares the inspiring and entertaining account of
his pursuit to become a nationally competitive tennis player—at the age
of sixty.
Being a man or a woman in your early sixties is
different than it was a generation or two ago, at least for the more
fortunate of us. We aren’t old…yet. But we sense it coming: Careers are
winding down, kids are gone, parents are dying (friends, too), and our
bodies are no longer youthful or even middle-aged. Learning to play
tennis in your fifties is no small feat, but becoming a serious,
competitive tennis player at the age of sixty is a whole other matter.
It requires training the body to defy age, and to methodically build
one’s game—the strokework, footwork, strategy, and mental toughness.
Gerry
Mazorati started playing the game seriously in his mid-fifties. He had
the strong desire to lead an examined physical life, to push his body
into the “encore” of middle age. In Late to the Ball Mazorati
writes vividly about the difficulties, frustrations, and the triumphs of
his becoming a seriously good tennis player. He takes on his quest with
complete vigor and absolute determination to see it through, providing a
rich, vicarious experience involving the science of aging, his
existential battle with time, and the beautiful, mysterious game of
tennis. Late to the Ball is also captivating evidence that the
rest of the Baby Boomer generation, now between middle age and old age,
can find their own quest and do the same.
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