Jim Dent did an excellent job with "The Junction Boys"--the story of how a young Paul "Bear" Bryant took over the Texas A & M football team and brought it to a higher level than anyone expected. Therefore, I read this book expecting an insider's view of the revival of the Notre Dame program.
Instead, this book is composed of a patchwork of seemingly unrelated anecdotes combined with numerous repetitive references to how things were under the previous coaches, Joe Kuharich and Hughie Devore. My impression is that Dent interviewed a few former players and pasted those into articles provided by sportswriters and others. There were a few points of interest but those were buried under, for example, an extended description of the summer vacation of one of the players. And I quickly wearied of the repetitive "Devore said this" or "Kuharich did that" I understand that neither coach was a positive. But the constant return to how things were deprives readers of what things were like under Parseghian.
In addition, there are numerous factual errors. The passenger aircraft used by the team was an "Electra", not an "Electric" A player who worked at a summer camp in Michigan worked at Camp Algonquin near Hastings, not "Algonquin"--there is no such town, village or city by that name in Michigan. And a '64 Pontiac GTO with a 389 has dual exhausts, not one. A 389 had three two-barrel carburetors, not a "triple double-barrel" (sic) carburetor. The popular term was, "Three deuces" C'mon, Jim. Hire an editor.
This was a disappointing read.