At the Fights: American Writers on Boxing by Various (2012) Paperback by Various
Author:Various [Various]
Language: swe
Format: epub
Amazon: B011MCBAUI
Publisher: Library of America
Published: 1709-03-15T00:00:00+00:00
“I am hereby returning the M.B.E. because every time I look at it I think of millions of men, women and children who died and are still dying in Biafra because of the arms and ammunition the British Government is sending to Nigeria and its continued moral support of this genocidal war against the people of Biafra.”
He signed it “Dick Tiger Ihetu.”
We walked across Eighth Avenue in the brilliant, chilly afternoon, and up the post office steps. Tiger said, “If they ask me how much it’s worth, what should I say?”
I shrugged. “We should try to pawn it and find out.”
“I’ll say a million dollars.” Tiger laughed for the first time. “I’ll say fifty or a hundred, just so it gets there.”
The clerk behind the registry wicket hefted the package and shook his head. “No good, you got Scotch tape on it. Go around the corner, they’ll give you some brown paper.”
Another line. He stood very quietly, a small black hat perched on his head, his body muffled in a fur-lined coat. I would always remember him for being overdressed and patient. He was always cold, and he was always willing to wait, for a bout, for a return bout, for a shot at a title. He was forty then, picking up fights wherever he could, waiting for one more big payday. If there had been no war, he would be retired in Aba, a rich man. He had been financially wiped out, but he said he could not complain, many others had lost all their property, and many, many others had lost their families and their lives.
A clerk finally handed him a long strip of gummed brown paper and a wet sponge in a glass dish. Tiger took it to a writing desk and began to tear the brown paper into small strips, his thick fingers careful and precise, the fingers of a man who taped his own hands.
When he finished the package he proudly held it up for me. “Now I know there is something else I can do.”
We waited for the registry clerk silently. “Okay,” he said, nodding at the package, then flipping it. “What’s in it?”
“A medal,” said Tiger softly.
“What’s it worth?”
“I don’t know. Fifty, hundred dollars?”
“No value,” said the clerk, to himself. He weighed it, registered it, asked Tiger if he wanted it to go airmail. Tiger said, “Yes.”
“One sixty.”
Tiger gave him two dollar bills, and counted his change. He adjusted his scarf as he walked out into the bright street, and smiled, and shook my hand gravely and could only say, “Well... ,” and shrug, and start down the steps. I never saw him again.
In the summer of 1971, after working briefly as a guard in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Dick Tiger returned to his native land. He was penniless, and brought nothing home except the cancer in his liver. He died that December, in Aba, at the age of forty-two.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan(8886)
How to Bang a Billionaire by Alexis Hall(7931)
Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng(6853)
Win Bigly by Scott Adams(6826)
Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin(6808)
Pachinko by Min Jin Lee(5427)
Tease (Temptation Series Book 4) by Ella Frank(5405)
The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin(5016)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky(4406)
China Rich Girlfriend by Kwan Kevin(4287)
First Position by Melissa Brayden(4273)
Bluets by Maggie Nelson(4260)
Rich People Problems by Kevin Kwan(4123)
The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen(4093)
A Little Life (2015) by Hanya Yanagihara(4042)
Right Here, Right Now by Georgia Beers(3914)
Walking by Henry David Thoreau(3681)
Catherine Anderson - Comanche 03 by Indigo Blue(3469)
I'll Catch You by Farrah Rochon(3421)
