Gardner Selby of the Austin American Statesman reviewed Strong Inside in advance of my trip to Austin, the town where I attended high school (Go Maroons!). Here’s the full review:
It’s not often a writer uncovers a hero all but hidden among us. But Tennessee author Andrew Maraniss (ahem, formerly a much younger softball teammate of mine around the time he was an Austin High Maroon) manages to lift the all-but-forgotten story of Perry Wallace — a college basketball player in the Lew Alcindor era — into a spotlight just that memorably bright.
Wallace, who played for Vanderbilt University, was not the first black player to join a previously all-white team in the Southeastern Conference. Speedy Martin (who would end up living in Grapevine, outside Dallas) had earlier accepted a scholarship to play baseball for Tulane University, though Tulane left the conference in Martin’s first year on the varsity.
But Wallace, who ended up a Washington, D.C., lawyer and professor, was the SEC’s first black player of a major-college sport. Maraniss makes his story much more than that by showing the player both as a court artist and a black man fully embracing the civil rights era.