Description
       What kind of person loses sight in one eye and then through dedicated        practice and honed skills becomes one of the top 50 NBA players of all        time? What kind of person, with limited business experience, builds a        start-up company into a thriving corporation and is recognized as one of        the world’s most successful black executives? What kind of person, while        running a $350 million business, takes the time to reach out to black        youths lacking father figures and provides counsel and support? And what        kind of person, instead of enjoying a well-deserved luxurious        retirement, chooses to become mayor of a large city that many long ago        had written off as dead? Dave Bing, that’s who.     
       In Dave Bing, Detroit Free Press sports columnist Drew Sharp        chronicles the compelling story of a figure whose sheer will to succeed,        refusal to make excuses for setbacks, and efforts to contribute to        society set him apart as an anomaly—a man of virtues so rarely found in        recent history. His path from Washington D.C. to Syracuse to Detroit is        sometimes tumultuous, blazed by hard work, perseverance, and savvy. Much        more than the stereotypical tale of celebrity ex-jock who does good,        this is a story about a black male who, even as a youngster, determined        to conquer whatever challenges came his way.     
       And now, as mayor of Detroit, Bing encounters perhaps his greatest test        of all. Faced with entrenched and power-hungry political foes, a series        of failed and corrupt predecessors, a work force ill prepared for        today’s job market, a staggering city debt, and recent health problems,        Bing would appear to have little chance of surviving his office. Both        the naysayers and optimists would do well to read the book.