"A very readable history about a lot more than the hapless team from Detroit. Because the Lions have long been owned by the Ford family, we learn much about the palace intrigues inside Ford Motor Co., especially those of William Clay Ford. Mr. Morris also gives readers a history of the automobile industry, from its heyday in the 1950s to the beginnings of its struggles in the 1970s. And because it's Detroit, Mr. Morris delves into the racial politics and white flight that have made the city the symbol of American urban decay. This year, the Lions are considered one of the top three teams going into the new season. 'The turnaround, ' Mr. Morris writes, 'given all the history and all the misery that came before it, was beyond an astonishment. It was very nearly a miracle.'"--The Wall Street Journal
"I loved this book; and I'm not even a football fan. The Lions Finally Roar is to football what Roger Kahn's The Boys of Summer is to baseball. You don't have to be a follower of sports to find inspiration and entertainment in this superb history of American culture and of the rebirth of a great city."--Loren D. Estleman, author of the Amos Walker series
"A masterly chronicle of the most hapless team in football. Funny, insightful, and, for a long-suffering Lions fan like myself, surprisingly fun to read. A wise and winning book that's a must for any fan of the game."--TAYLOR PLIMPTON, sportswriter and author of Notes from the Night: A Life After Dark
"From the long-lasting curse of Bobby Layne and the depths of the Matt Millen era into today's sunlight as one of the NFL's most promising teams, Bill Morris takes his readers on a rollicking journey. A splendid writer, astute chronicler of Detroit's rich history, and son of Bill Ford's personal 'PR guy, ' Morris was the perfect author to tell this dramatic tale."--DAVID MARANISS, author of When Pride Still Mattered: A Life of Vince Lombardi
"I don't like sports. I particularly don't like football. Which is why it's so surprising how much I loved The Lions Finally Roar. Maybe it's because it's also a story of Detroit, which I do love, despite its complicated, crumbling, terrible, glorious, corrupt, iconoclastic, hubristic history. Morris gives us the low-down on how the team and the city could gradually rise from the ashes and finally find its own unique brand of redemption."--MICHAEL ZADOORIAN, author of The Leisure Seeker
"The 'hero's journey' has always been one fraught with incalculable danger, crushing failure and injurious self-doubt. Nowhere is this truer than the decades-long epic journey of the Detroit Lions. Bill Morris brilliantly documents this journey with fascinating insights, sometimes scathing humor and impenetrable detail that gives us a grid-iron-level look at our Detroit Lions. And I say 'our Detroit Lions' because, like a tragic Greek play, Detroiters have always been the chorus singing in the worst of seasons, 'We believe in you!'"--Stephen Mack Jones, bestselling author of August Snow and Deus X
"Things really are turning around for the Detroit Lions. Not only is this recently woeful team must-see TV for the first time since Barry Sanders' retirement, they are the subject of the best new sports book I've read in years. Maybe it's no coincidence that the Lions have inspired two great football epics -- tough seasons make good literature -- as George Plimpton's Paper Lion is now joined in the motor city pantheon by Bill Morris's The Lions Finally Roar. This is a truly excellent book, and, like only the best sports books, is about far more than the team or the game. It's about the city and its people, from the auto industry aristocrats to the Strohs besotted lunatics in the cheap seats. Now that the Lions finally have their gridiron scribe, there will be no stopping them -- a realization not easy for a Bears fan like myself. Here's hoping Caleb Williams pans out!"--Rich Coen, author of Monsters: The 1985 Chicago Bears and the Wild Heart of Football
Praise for Bill Morris "[Morris] does a superb job of recounting a life amid a series of significant decades. His imaginative 'mongrel' approach--a mix of...biography, history, reportage, memoir, autobiography, and, when the record runs thin, speculation that flirts with fiction--is successful. An entertaining combination of domestic and world history."-- "Kirkus, Starred Review" "A wonderfully atmospheric novel that captures time and place, an illumination of a pivotal point in history. Bill Morris is an exceptionally gifted and savvy writer. The comparison to Graham Greene is fully merited."-- "Nelson DeMille"
"Switching between Bledsoe and Doyle's perspectives allows for a crackling pace, and Mr. Morris clearly loves the nooks and crannies of his hometown Detroit the way George Pelecanos loves Washington."-- "The New York Times"