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The Duke, the Longhorns, and Chairman Mao

John Wayne's Political Odyssey
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1966. The year of change. The year of division. The middle of the 1960s, the great dividing line between what America had been, and what it became. All of it, in all its color, glory, and ugliness, came symbolically together on a hot, humid weekend in Austin, Texas. The protagonist? None other John "Duke" Wayne, the larger-than-life movie hero of countless Westerns and war dramas; a swashbuckling, ruggedly macho idol of America; the very embodiment of what the United States had become-the new Rome: the most powerful military, political, and cultural empire in the annals of mankind. Wayne, like the nation itself, stood astride the world in Colossus style, talking tough. Taking no prisoners. In September 1966, John Wayne was in Texas filming War Wagon while the integrated Trojans of the University of Southern California arrived in Austin to do battle with a powerhouse of equal stature, the all-white Texas Longhorns. The Duke, a one-time pulling guard for coach Howard Jones at USC, was there, accompanied by sycophants, and according to rumor, with spurs on. Wayne arrived in Austin the night before the game. Dressed to the nines, he immediately repaired to the hotel bar. He had a full entourage who hung on his every word as if uttered from the Burning Bush. So it was when the Duke ordered his first whiskey. Thus surrounded by sycophants, John Wayne bellowed opinions, bromides, and pronouncements. What happened next is subject to interpretation, for this weekend and many other details of the Duke's "Trojan wars" are revealed and expounded upon by longtime USC historian Steven Travers. This book is a fly-on-the-wall exploration of this wild weekend and an immersion into the John Wayne mythology: his politics, his inspirations, the plots to assassinate him, his connections to Stalin, Khrushchev, and Chairman Mao, and the death of the Western.
Steven Travers is the author of more than twenty books, including Barry Bonds: Baseball's Superman, nominated for a Casey Award as Best Baseball Book of 2002, and One Night, Two Teams: Alabama vs. USC and the Game That Changed a Nation, a 2007 PNBA nominee, subject of the CBS/CSTV documentary Tackling Segregation, and currently in film development. A graduate of the University of Southern California, Travers coached at USC, Cal-Berkeley and in Europe; served in the Army; attended law school; and has been a sports agent. He has written for the Los Angeles Times, StreetZebra magazine, and the San Francisco Examiner. Travers has been a guest lecturer at USC's Annenberg School for Communications since 2006 and writes for Gentry magazine. His screenplays include The Lost Battalion, 21, and Wicked. He lives in California and has a daughter, Elizabeth Travers Lee.
Don't pick up this book expecting to soon put it down. A veritable parade of characters populates its pages: Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev; Ted Williams and Ronald Reagan; Ward Bond and Maureen O'Hara. In The Duke, the Longhorns, and Chairman Mao, towering always is John Wayne. As author Steven Travers says, Wayne became 'an utter myth, a legend of the very highest order.' This book deftly explores Wayne's appeal and his exquisite grasp of Middle America's joys, worries, and confessions of the heart. A terrific read. -- Curt Smith, former speechwriter to President George H. W. Bush; author of Voices of the Game; regular columnist for GateHouse Media Inc. newspapers Steven Travers has been one of the nation's top authors for nearly two decades. This book showcases what Travers does best-combining sports with the political and sociological landscape-and nobody does it better. The Duke, the Longhorns, and Chairman Mao is a must-read. -- Fred Wallin, Sports Byline Broadcast Network
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