This image is the cover for the book Big Bill Tilden

Big Bill Tilden

“A compelling, long overdue tribute” to America’s first tennis star from the renowned sportswriter and author of Everybody’s All-American (Kirkus Reviews).
  When he stepped onto the Wimbledon grass in 1920, Bill Tilden was poised to become the world’s greatest tennis star. Throughout the 1920s he dominated the sport, winning championship after championship with his trademark grace, power, and intelligence. He owned the game more completely than Babe Ruth ruled baseball, making his name, for more than a decade, synonymous with tennis. Phenomenally intelligent—he completed his first book on tennis in the three weeks before his first Wimbledon triumph—Tilden’s success came with a dark side. This classic biography by legendary sports writer Frank Deford tells of Tilden’s dominance, which was unlike anything the sport had ever seen—and the big man’s tragic fall.

Frank Deford

<B>Frank Deford</B> is a Senior Writer at <I>Sports Illustrated</I>, is heard every Wednesday on NPR's <I>Morning Edition</I>, and is a regular correspondent on HBO's <I>Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel</I>. He is the author of fourteen books, two of which have been made into movies, including <I>Everybody's All-American</I> with Dennis Quaid and Jessica Lange. He has been voted U.S. Sportswriter of the Year six times, and <I>GQ</I> magazine has called him, simply, "the world's greatest sportswriter." He has also won both an Emmy and a George Foster Peabody Award. He lives in Westport, Connecticut.

Open Road Integrated Media