Books about Antihero from Amazon.com

Love Me, Hate Me: Barry Bonds and the Making of an Antihero

No player in the history of baseball has left such an indelible mark on the game as San Francisco Giants outfielder Barry Bonds. In his twenty-year career, Bonds has amassed an unprecedented seven MVP awards, eight Gold Gloves, and more than seven hundred home runs, an impressive assortment of feats that has earned him consideration as one of the greatest players the game has ever seen. Equally deserved, however, is his reputation as an insufferable braggart, whose mythical home runs are rivaled only by his legendary ego. From his staggering ability and fabled pedigree (father Bobby played outfield for the Giants; cousin Reggie Jackson and godfather Willie Mays are both Hall of Famers) to his well-documented run-ins with teammates and the persistent allegations of steroid use, Bonds inspires a like amount of passion from both sides of the fence. For many, Bonds belongs beside Babe Ruth and Hank Aaron in baseball's holy trinity; for others, he embodies all that is wrong with the modern athlete: aloof; arrogant; alienated.

In Love Me, Hate Me, author Jeff Pearlman offers a searing and insightful look into one of the most divisive athletes of our time. Drawing on more than five hundred interviews -- with former and current teammates, opponents, managers, trainers, friends, and outspoken critics and unapologetic supporters alike -- Pearlman reveals, for the first time, a wonderfully nuanced portrait of a prodigiously talented and immensely flawed American icon whose controversial run at baseball immortality forever changed the way we look at our sports heroes.

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Price: $2.77 [Notify me when price goes down.]


The Anti-Hero in the American Novel: From Joseph Heller to Kurt Vonnegut (American Literature Readings in the Twenty-First Century)
The Anti-Hero in the American Novel rereads major texts of the 1960s such as Catch-22, One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, and Slaughterhouse 5 to offer an innovative re-evaluation of a set of canonical novels that moves beyond entrenched post-modern and post-structural interpretations towards an appraisal which emphasizes the specifically humanist and idealist elements of these works, and in the process reasserts the important social impetus that lies behind them.
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Price: $34.97 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Oriel
It is the height of conflict in the Imetarian-Dellotune war. Both sides have been usurped by dark times as the poverty-stricken Dellotune, once banished by King Donovix to the provinces in the north, now fight the powerful Imetarians in the name of change. A hundred-thousand have lost their lives, thousands more will parish still. At the heart of this battle, the elusive Assassin's Guild has profited much. Infamous for its legendary and often debated existence, the guild sends its Reapers off to fulfill contracts on the lives of many unlucky individuals. Oriel is a master of his trade and feels he has passed the peak of his career. After collecting payment on the death of an Imetarian officer, the jaded assassin immediately finds himself the target of his own guild. With his safety in palpable danger, he embarks on a perilous vendetta to face off against enemies unknown and forces greater than he could ever imagine. He discovers not all friends can be allies, and not all enemies are foes..
Price: $6.36 [Notify me when price goes down.]


Death of a Super Anti-Hero
Cloakman was more a super anti-hero than a super hero, something of a rogue, a shadowy sort of figure who ended up doing the right thing in spite of himself Only he had never counted on the chain of command .
Price: $0.49 [Notify me when price goes down.]


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