Word Of Sport: The Sports Bookshop

Please login or join us

Lost password?


Expert Search

Expert search terms

Standard search

Criteria for search
Where to look
Look in our weblog

You can also get help with searching or try browsing by tag.


You are in: Home / Books / To Hate Like This is to be Happy Forever

To Hate Like This is to be Happy Forever

A Thoroughly Obsessive, Intermittently Uplifting, and Occasionally Unbiased Account of the Duke-North Carolina Baseketball Rivalry

Author:
By Will Blythe
Format:
Paperback (Hardback)
Availability:
In print, usually dispatched within 3-4 days.
Price:
£9.99
Tagged with:
, , , ,

Member Reviews

You Can

To Hate Like This is to be Happy Forever

Further Details

  • Published: 9th Jan 2007
  • ISBN: 0060740248
  • Pages: 363

Purchase options

Add to Basket


From the Publisher:

It is a basketball rivalry that simply has no equal. Duke vs. North Carolina is Ali vs. Frazier, the Giants vs. the Dodgers, the Red Sox vs. the Yankees. Hell, it's bigger than that. This is the Democrats vs. the Republicans, the Yankees vs. the Confederates, capitalism vs. communism. All right, okay, the Life Force vs. the Death Instinct, Eros vs. Thanatos. Is that big enough?"

The basketball rivalry between Duke and North Carolina is the fiercest blood feud in college athletics. To legions of otherwise reasonable adults, it is a conflict that surpasses sports; it is locals against outsiders, elitists against populists, even good against evil. It is thousands of grown men and women with jobs and families screaming themselves hoarse at eighteen-year-old basketball geniuses, trading conspiracy theories in online chat rooms, and weeping like babies when their teams - when they - lose. In North Carolina, where both schools are located, the rivalry may be a way of aligning oneself with larger philosophic ideals - of choosing teams in life - a tradition of partisanship that reveals the pleasures and even the necessity of hatred.

What makes people invest their identities in what is elsewhere seen as "just a game"? What made North Carolina senator John Edwards risk alienating voters by telling a reporter, "I hate Duke basketball"? What makes people care so much?

The answers have a lot to do with class and culture in the South, and author Will Blythe expands a history of an epic grudge into an examination of family, loyalty, privilege, and Southern manners. As the season unfolds, Blythe, the former longtime literary editor of Esquire and a lifelong Tar Heels fan, immerses himself in the lives of the two teams, eavesdropping on practice sessions, hanging with players, observing the arcane rituals of fans, and struggling to establish some basic human kinship with Duke's players and proponents. With Blythe's access to the coaches, the stars, and the bit players, the book is both a chronicle of personal obsession and a picaresque record of social history.

January Sale

With titles up to 80% off, you can't afford to miss our exciting January sale.

Recently Viewed

  1. To Hate Like This is to be Happy Forever (paperback)

Free Shipping

Introductory Offer:

Spend more than £20.00 and get free UK delivery!

Shipping information

From The Members

Read the latest member reviews, see popular titles and today’s featured member.

Members’ section

Join Us

As a member you can post your own book reviews, get first dibs on signed books and special offers. Membership is free and comes with 10% off your first order!

Register for membership

It's A Fact!

At 6 foot 7 Kevin Francis was the tallest player in the football league. And so said every newspaper article and programme feature written about him throughout his career. He's now a long distance lorry driver.

JacquesClaw’ Avatar

Submitted by: JacquesClaw