Friday, May 23, 2014

Book Tour: Inner City Strength - The Last Unknown Name Slaughter By Dwight Slaughter @Slaughterdwight @VBTCafe #Giveaway








Dwight Slaughter graduated from Verbum Dei High School, a school with one of the top 10 winning basketball teams of all time. While at Verbum Dei High School Dwight was voted number one player in the Country in 1972 by different sports magazines.  He then went on to further his education and play basketball at Cal State Los Angeles from 1972 to 1976-a period that would set a precedent with new laws changing how colleges accept athletes. During his athletic career, Slaughter was interviewed by such greats as Howard Cosell, on his show SportsBeat and in his book, I Never Played the Game; Morley Safer from 60 Minutes; and John Chancellor from World Nightly News. He was voted by ESPN and Sports Illustrated as one of the top 100 basketball players in the State of California.


Author Interview:

What inspired you to write Inner City Strength? The book has been in the making for 20-25 years.

When or at what age did you know you wanted to be a writer?

When I was young I loved to read, I really never looked at myself as a writer.

What is the earliest age you remember reading your first book? Age five.

What genre of books do you enjoy reading?

I love non-fiction books the true stories are inspirational and have helped me in my walk of life.

What is your favorite book?

I Never Played The Game by Howard Cosell.

You know I think we all have a favorite author. Who is your favorite author and why?

My favorite author is Howard Cosell. He wrote many great books that dealt with true-life stories and peoples struggles.

If you could travel back in time here on earth to any place or time. Where would you go and why?

I would go back to high school, though the struggles of my life. I felt safe and at piece when I was in high school.

When writing a book do you find that writing comes easy for you or is it a difficult task?

Writing comes easy to me; I feel it's a gift from God.

Do you have any little fuzzy friends? Like a dog or a cat? Or any pets?

Yes… I have a beautiful Golden Retrieval his name is Bishop.

What is your "to die for", favorite food/foods to eat?

A nice Prime Rib and potatoes

Do you have any advice for anyone that would like to be an author?

If it's in you go for it, you will be amazed how writing opens your mind and take you into a journey you never thought you could go into. Never give up on your dreams, and remember "If you fall down get up and finish"







Book Genre: BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Sports
Publisher: Dwight Slaughter
Release Date: 2/14/2014



Book Description:

Dwight Slaughter graduated from Verbum Dei High School, a school with one of the top 10 winning basketball teams of all time. While at Verbum Dei High School Dwight was voted number one player in the Country in 1972 by different sports magazines. He then went on to further his education and play basketball at Cal State Los Angeles from 1972 to 1976-a period that would set a precedent with new laws changing how colleges accept athletes. During his athletic career, Slaughter was interviewed by such greats as Howard Cosell, on his show SportsBeat and in his book, I Never Played the Game; Morley Safer from 60 Minutes; and John Chancellor from World Nightly News. He was voted by ESPN and Sports Illustrated as one of the top 100 basketball players in the State of California. As a child, Slaughter relied on basketball to build his self-esteem and relieve the stress of mental and physical abuse. His gripping memoir follows his public career and takes the reader inside his personal life as well-into a childhood of abuse, betrayal…even murder.


Excerpt:

During his athletic career, Slaughter was interviewed by such greats as Howard Cosell, on his show SportsBeat and in his book, I Never Played the Game; Morley Safer from 60 Minutes; and John Chancellor from World Nightly News. He was voted by ESPN and Sports Illustrated as one of the top 100 basketball players in the State of California.
As a child, Slaughter relied on basketball to build his self-esteem and relieve the stress of mental and physical abuse. His gripping memoir follows his public career and takes the reader inside his personal life of childhood abuse, betrayal…and murder.
As the author explains, his prowess with a basketball masked an escape from a tarnished life off the court.
 "I grew up being treated like nothing, so I was driven to make something of my life. Sport allowed me to mix with people who cared about me, develop a passion that got me out of the house and achieve things that would win me the acceptance I couldn't get at home," says Slaughter, who is a committed mentor to both young and adult men.









1 comments:

Debbie Jean said...

Thank You for hosting today! From Virtual Book Tour Cafe