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All Carry
by Gene Wojciechowski
In Gene Wojciechowski’s heartwarming fiction debut, All Carry, a newly laid-off golf reporter and a disgraced former caddy team up after discovering a magical, vintage set of Jack Nicklaus’s golf clubs. To repair a fractured relationship with his estranged son and pull off the ultimate comeback, Joe must attempt the impossible: win the Masters as an amateur.
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The Power and the Glory: The History of the World Cup
by Jonathan Wilson
The football World Cup is the most-watched sporting event on the planet, yet its story extends far beyond the pitch. Built on fresh interviews and exhaustive research, this definitive history captures nearly a century of iconic matches, backstage scandals, and geopolitical drama—proving that the story of the World Cup is truly the story of the modern world.
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In Her Own League
by Liz Tomforde
As Major League Baseball’s first female owner, Reese Remington can’t afford any missteps—or distractions. Enter Emmett Montgomery, the stubborn, tempting field manager who challenges her at every turn. But as forced proximity ignites an irresistible spark, they find themselves locked in a game where playing it safe is no longer an option.
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The Open Era
by Edward Schmit
Making history as the first openly gay man in a Grand Slam, tennis prodigy Austin Hardy is buckling under the world’s spotlight. Enter Diego Cruz: world #2, intensely talented, and dangerously attractive. As their off-court friendship sparks an electric rivalry, Austin must decide if falling for his biggest competition will ruin his game—or win him everything.
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Baddest Man: The Making of Mike Tyson
by Mark Kriegel
In this definitive biography, acclaimed writer Mark Kriegel pulls back the curtain on the Mike Tyson phenomenon. Moving beyond the headlines of his 91-second knockout of Michael Spinks and his 1980s celebrity status, Kriegel explores the man behind the myth—a figure who survived a brutal upbringing to become a complex, misunderstood touchstone of American culture.
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Death of the Soccer God
by Dimitry Elias Léger
Defying his father’s demands to abandon soccer for business, Haitian gentleman Gilbert Chevalier flees Port-au-Prince for 1950s Harlem. When his Central Park scrimmages land him a spot on the US National Team for the Brazil World Cup, Gil is swept into a roaring, mythic Pan-American adventure. Dimitry Elias Léger’s Death of the Soccer God is a lush, high-voltage tale of fame, fate, and forbidden ambition.
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Forty Love
by Jane Costello
Single mum Jules has zero interest in exercise—until her teenage crush, doctor Sam Delaney, starts practicing his killer forehand right outside her bedroom window. Battling perimenopause and an empty-nest anxiety wave, Jules impulsively joins a desperate amateur tennis team for a distraction. As friendships form and court chemistry ignites, Jules finds herself falling hard... but will her secret encounters with Sam lead to a devastating double fault?
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The Heyday of Willie, Duke, and Mickey: New York City Baseball's Golden Age Amid Integration
by Robert C. Cottrell
In postwar America, New York City was the absolute epicenter of baseball. Robert Cottrell’s The Heyday of Willie, Duke, and Mickey captures this golden era—from the storied crosstown rivalries of Willie Mays, Duke Snider, and Mickey Mantle to the vital, often-overlooked history of the city's five Negro League teams. Richly detailed and deeply evocative, this book blends on-field glory with the complex story of integration, race, and a changing nation.
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A Course Called Home: Adventures of an Accidental Golf Course Owner
by Tom Coyne
Bestselling author Tom Coyne has traveled the world playing iconic courses, but his most profound journey leads him straight to his own backyard. In A Course Called Home, Coyne unexpectedly buys a dilapidated nine-hole course in New York’s Catskills. Trading tee times for tractor hours, he joins a ragtag community of regulars to restore the historic property—delivering a funny, heartfelt love letter to golf, community, and second chances.
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Landon: A Memoir
by Landon Donovan
As one of the most decorated players in US soccer history, Landon Donovan’s storied career was defined by iconic World Cup goals and six MLS championships. But behind the legendary #10 jersey lay an intense, lifelong battle with depression and a search for peace off the pitch. Unflinchingly honest, Landon is a powerful story of resilience, identity, and finding self-acceptance beyond the game.
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Catch Her If You Can
by Tessa Bailey
Newest Yankees catcher Madden Donahue has loved burlesque club owner Eve Mitchell since high school. When Eve is left abruptly caring for her sister's kids, Madden steps in with a secret marriage of convenience to offer health benefits and support. Eve has pined for Madden for years, but her reputation and a long-held secret kept her away. As fake vows ignite real, irresistible heat, Madden sets out to prove their bond is anything but a temporary arrangement.
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The Racket: On Tour with Tennis's Golden Generation - And the Other 99%
by Conor Niland
At 16, Irish junior #1 Conor Niland was hitting with Serena Williams. Years later, he was facing Novak Djokovic on Arthur Ashe Stadium while battling food poisoning. But Niland was never a superstar. The Racket is a witty, revealing memoir of pro tennis’s 99%—the lonely touring pros chasing Grand Slam dreams while fighting to cover expenses, dodge match-fixing shadows, and survive the grueling economics of the tour.
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The Running Ground: A Father, a Son, and the Simplest of Sports
by Nicholas Thompson
For Nicholas Thompson, running has always been a lifeline. Following his brilliant father’s tragic downfall, Thompson feared his inherited ambition would lead him down the same path—until a chance to train with elite coaches transformed everything. Spanning seven years of intense discipline, family legacy, and physical rebirth, The Running Ground is a deeply moving story about fathers, sons, and finding transcendence on the run.
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We Are the World (Cup): A Personal History of the World's Greatest Sporting Event
by Roger Bennett
Every four years, the World Cup unites millions in drama, heartbreak, and glory. In We Are the World (Cup), Men in Blazers founder Roger Bennett delivers a deeply personal, deeply researched chronicle of every tournament from 1978 to 2022. Packed with his trademark wit and passion, Bennett explores both the game's global magic and soccer's explosive rise in America—celebrating a sport that brings the world together.
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The Amateur
by Chris Bohjalian
In August 1978, eighteen-year-old golf prodigy Mira Winston strikes a practice ball that rips through a driving range net, killing a caddy instantly. What begins as a tragic freak accident quickly unravels an affluent Westchester country club's veneer. As secrets of predatory men, illicit affairs, and long-held grudges come to light, the community turns on Mira—putting the young woman on trial in a gripping tale of privilege, grief, and fatal consequences.
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