��he definitive book��(The Ring) on one of the greatest sports events of the twentieth century, the heavyweight championship bout between America's ��rown Bomber,��Joe Louis, and
Germany's Max Schmeling.
More than the world heavyweight championship was at stake when Joe Louis fought Max Schmeling on June 22, 1938. In a world on the brink of war, the fight was depicted as a contest between
nations, races, and political ideologies, the symbol of a much vaster struggle. Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels boasted that the Aryan Schmeling would crush his ��nferior��black
opponent. President Roosevelt told Louis, his guest at the White House, that ��merica needs muscles like yours to beat Germany.��For Louis, this was also his chance to avenge the only loss in
his brilliant career��y a knockout��o the same Max Schmeling two years earlier.
Recreating the drama of their momentous bout, the author traces the lives of both fighters before and after the fight, including Schmeling's efforts in Nazi Germany to protect Jewish friends
and the two boxers' surprising friendship in the postwar years. In Fight of the Century Myler tells the story of two decent men, drawn together by boxing and divided by the cruel
demands of competing nations.