Written by an academic, it is intelligent and interesting but fails to be an enthralling biography about a man who overcame racism to become an influential man of tennis and black activism. Through difficulty and dignity Ashe is shown as a man who was on a mission even before he was aware. Growing up in the segregated south, by a stern widower father, he is discovered and coached to phenom tennis player winning the 1968 US Open and becoming the first African American male to win Wimbledon.
This biography lacks smoothness and is repetitive in places, bouncing in and out of years, when describing his tennis achievements and activism. Not diminished is the message of his black empowerment activism in anti-apartheid, education, and civil rights. He is shown as maturing from a position of engagement and open dialogue with opponents to becoming a staunch advocate of economic sanctions and going to jail with lifelong activists.
Interestingly, for most of his life, until he married, he had blatant sexist ideas about women’s roles, especially in tennis. He openly stood against Billie Jean King’s fight for equal pay and acceptance in tennis. Even though he had strong convictions on civil and human rights he was way off on women’s rights.
An article in the New York Times titled Should Athlete’s Stick to Sports (2/14/17) considers the controversy of athletes speaking out (or not) on political issues. Ashe's life definitively gives insight on what is to be gained and the cost of doing so.