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    Becoming Muhammad Ali


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      Text copyright © 2020 by Kwame Alexander, James Patterson, and Muhammad Ali Enterprises, LLC

      Illustrations copyright © 2020 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, Hachette Book Group, Inc., Muhammad Ali Enterprises, LLC, Kwame Alexander, and James Patterson

      Cover illustration © 2020 by Dawud Anyabwile

      Cover design by Mary Claire Cruz

      Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

      The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the authors’ and illustrator’s rights.

      JIMMY Patterson Books / Little, Brown and Company

      Hachette Book Group

      1290 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10104

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      First ebook edition: October 2020

      JIMMY Patterson Books is an imprint of Little, Brown and Company, a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The JIMMY Patterson Books® name and logo are trademarks of JBP Business, LLC.

      Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Books for Young Readers is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company

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      ISBN 978-0-316-49818-0

      E3-20201022-JV-PC-COR

      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Epigraph

      ROUND ONE Before the Fight

      Cassius Clay vs. Alex Watt: February 24, 1958

      Cassius Clay vs. Francis Turley: February 25, 1958

      Knockout

      Long Count

      Celebration Dinner Menu

      I Jumped Up On

      Cassius Clay vs. Kent Green: February 26, 1958: Golden Gloves Semifinals

      On the Phone with Lucky

      ROUND TWO Granddaddy Herman’s Living Room

      Where I’m From

      My Momma

      She Says the Day I Was Born

      After That

      Cassius Clay vs. Odessa “Bird” Clay: March 14, 1943

      When Bird Gets Mad

      My Brother, Rudy

      Now, My Daddy

      Signs My Father Painted

      Some Sundays

      Growing Up

      Everything

      The Other Side

      Later That Day

      Two Louisvilles

      I Want to Be Rich

      Momma Hollered

      ROUND THREE My Friends

      Faster Than a Speeding Bullet

      Card Trick

      Conversation with Granddaddy Herman

      That Same Night

      Ritual

      One Friday

      The Accident

      We Never Saw Him After That

      Conversation with Tall Bubba

      Report Card Friday

      School

      In the Second Grade

      Failed Plan

      Conversation with Momma Bird

      Turning Point

      I Was Twelve

      ROUND FOUR During the Summers

      Tomorrow’s Champion

      Fifty Cents

      On the Way Home I Would

      Odd Jobs

      The Block

      The Legend of Corky Butler

      The Story Continues

      Conversation with My Daddy

      Angels

      When We Pull Up

      Early Christmas

      All Hail the King

      After School Started Back Up

      Mystery

      ROUND FIVE The Day I Was Born Again

      We Stopped In

      The Thunderstorm

      Shelter

      Crazy Eyes

      After

      Before That

      Conversation with Teenie

      Shock

      Tragedy

      Lucky Said

      Downstairs

      Columbia Boxing Gym

      In the Middle

      Conversation with an Old White Guy

      Momma, Please

      ROUND SIX Distance

      Conversation with Lucky

      Only Way

      Roadwork

      Chickasaw Park

      Conversation with Bird

      My Victory Speech

      Craps

      We Take

      Regimen

      Conversation with Joe Martin

      The First Time

      Sunday

      Love

      Conversation with Rudy

      Cassius Clay vs. Ronnie O’Keefe: November 12, 1954

      Promotional Tour

      Introducing Me

      ROUND SEVEN Cassius Clay vs. James Davis: February 4, 1955

      Cassius Clay vs. John Hampton: July 22, 1955

      Conversation with Rudy

      Before

      We Thought

      I Was Thirteen

      After

      I Was Thirteen

      The Next Few Years

      A Guy with a Camera

      Introduction: Reprise

      Cassius Clay vs. Jimmy Ellis: August 30, 1957

      Rematch

      Cassius Clay vs. Jimmy Ellis, Part 2: October 12, 1957

      Conversation with Rudy

      ROUND EIGHT Birthday

      Beat

      Cassius Clay vs. Kent Green: February 26, 1958

      Lucky Read

      Face-Off

      Conversation with Corky Butler

      Sometimes My Mouth Moves Faster Than My Mind

      You’re Crazy

      Cassius Clay vs. Corky Butler: July 26, 1958

      ROUND NINE At Central High School

      The Principal

      Talking Trash

      After Winning

      Jack Johnson vs. Tommy Burns: December 26, 1908

      The Brown Bomber

      Joe Louis vs. Rocky Marciano: October 26, 1951

      Sweet as Sugar

      Bon Voyage

      Conversation with Teenie

      Golden Gloves Party Menu

      Momma Bird’s Prayer

      After Dinner

      Pick a Card

      How’d You Do That?

      The Night Before

      Amen. Amen. Amen.

      The Day Of

      Cassius Clay vs. Tony Madigan: March 25, 1959

      FINAL ROUND

      Acknowledgments

      Bibliography

      Newsletters

      For Odessa Clay and Cassius Clay Sr.

      For Randy

      Gratitude, old chap, for constantly reminding me to be my best self… and to drink lots of water—K.A.

      The wonders and woes

      in this novel are true…

      or based on truth

      and real things…

      that happened

      to real people…

      or real people

      we imagined…

      to be true…

      for real.

      ROUND ONE

      I remember everything. You probably would have too. That night was a piece of American hist
    ory.

      The Clay family phone was dusky black with a rotary dial, and it sat on a wooden table in the neat-as-a-pin living room of the little house on Grand Avenue in Louisville, Kentucky.

      Some twenty of us were crammed like sardines into the room, waiting for that phone to ring.

      Waiting. Waiting. Waiting for Cassius to call home.

      It was a February night in 1958. And I remember it like it was yesterday.

      My best friend, Cassius, was three hundred miles north in Chicago, and that night he was fighting for a championship in the Golden Gloves boxing tournament.

      Cassius wasn’t a professional yet, just an amateur. Tall, but a little skinny, and a lot raw. Only sixteen years old, like me.

      I’m Lucius, by the way. Nice to meet you. You can call me Lucky. All my friends do.

      Cassius had already won plenty of bouts all over Kentucky. But the Chicago Golden Gloves was the big time.

      When he won there—and we all knew he would—it would be lights out! From now on, people everywhere would know the name Cassius Clay.

      And so we waited for the phone to ring.

      I remember that living room was so packed with family and friends and neighbors that we could hardly move! The smell of roast chicken and sweet potato pie and cheese grits mixed with the smell of paint and turpentine. Mr. Clay, Cassius’s dad, who everybody called Cash, was a sign and billboard painter, and he kept his work supplies right there in the house.

      “Mrs. Clay!” somebody called out. “When that boy of yours gets famous, he ought to buy you a bigger house!”

      “Oh, you know he will!” she answered. Then she looked right at me. “Isn’t that right, Lucius?”

      “Yes, ma’am, you know it is. Cassius promised you a big house!”

      I remember that Mrs. Clay was too nervous to eat. But she wasn’t too nervous to talk about how proud she was!

      “My Cassius did everything early!” she was saying to a group of ladies. “He crawled early, talked early, walked early—walked on his toes like a dancer.”

      The ladies all laughed—as if they hadn’t heard that story a hundred times before. But Mrs. Clay just couldn’t help it. Cassius always told her he was bound to be the greatest—with a capital G—and she believed it with all her heart.

      So did I.

      So did everybody in Louisville’s West End.

      C’mon, phone. Ring, phone, ring-a-ding-ding.

      The men and boys around the room—including Cassius’s little brother, Rudy—looked at one another with big grins and made punching motions with their fists. The big fight should be over by now. Under those bright lights in the middle of that huge Chicago Stadium, Cassius would be standing tall in the ring with one hand over his head like always—his opponent next to him with head bowed down in defeat.

      Then the phone rang.

      It was Cassius with news about the fight. And he told it like only Cassius could tell a story…

      Before the Fight

      a reporter asked me

      if I thought

      I was as good

      as Joe Louis

      or Sugar Ray was

      at my age

      and I told him,

      I don’t think

      I’m as good,

      I’M BETTER.

      Got more FLOW

      than Joe,

      more SLAY

      than Ray.

      I’m sweeter,

      stronger,

      and faster.

      As a matter of fact,

      I’m so fast

      I can’t even catch

      MYSELF.

      Cassius Clay vs. Alex Watt

      FEBRUARY 24, 1958

      Here’s how it all went down:

      The bell rang

      in Chicago Stadium

      and I could barely see

      the lightweight rush me

      through the rank cigar smoke

      that filled the arena.

      In the first round,

      he threw punches

      like pitches,

      fast and straight,

      striking air

      and striking out.

      So, I played peek-a-boo

      in the second,

      sending quick jabs

      to his head.

      You ain’t ready for Cassius, I whispered.

      Then I shook him up

      with a left

      and took him down hard

      in the third.

      He sho’ wasn’t ready.

      But neither was I,

      when I found out

      who I was fighting

      next.

      Cassius Clay vs. Francis Turley

      FEBRUARY 25, 1958

      Frank Turley

      was a cowboy

      from Montana,

      meaner-looking

      than an angry ox,

      with fists

      even meaner.

      They said

      he broke a guy’s nose

      with a left jab,

      then smiled

      when the joker

      went tumbling

      outta the ring,

      blood spurting

      everywhichaway.

      I’ma lick you good, boss, he said,

      winking at me

      before the bell rang, and

      I believed

      that he believed

      he would.

      Knockout

      We traded punches

      like baseball cards.

      Him, a wild mustang.

      Me, a Louisville slugger.

      Back and forth,

      left and right,

      rough

      and rugged, till

      he cornered me

      with two lucky shots

      to the jaw

      that felt like kicks

      from a mule

      and sent me tumbling

      to the mat, wondering

      if I should just stay there.

      Long Count

      One…

      While I lay there,

      the referee standing

      over me, counting

      to ten

      to see if I could get up,

      I wished my father

      was sitting ringside

      shouting my name.

      Two…

      I thought about home,

      about 3302 Grand Avenue,

      and playing football

      in the backyard

      with Rudy, and

      Three…

      the Montgomery kids next door

      and who was gonna babysit them

      now that I was a boxer,

      Four…

      and whether Lucky

      bought the new Superman

      like he promised.

      Five…

      I thought about

      my granddaddy Herman’s story

      about Tom the Slave.

      Six…

      I thought about

      how boxing

      was gonna set me free,

      set us all free, and

      Seven…

      what I’d ask Momma Bird

      to cook

      for my celebration

      dinner

      after I got up and

      Eight…

      whupped this cowboy

      from Montana

      and advanced

      to the semi-finals

      of the 1958 Golden Gloves Championship.

      Celebration Dinner Menu

      Two orders of veal

      Three slices of white bread

      A bowl of cornbread dressing

      One large green salad

      A bowl of chili

      Scrambled eggs

      Cheese grits

      Baked chicken with baked potato

      Two pieces of pecan pie

      Five scoops of strawberry ice cream, and

      A great big ol’ glass

      of OJ.

      I Jumped Up On

      Nine…

      and Frank kept swinging

      like a lumberjack

      trying to knock
    down

      a tree

      but I kept standing,

      kept sticking,

      kept moving

      like a mighty wind

      till the final bell rang

      and the judges

      unanimously called out

      my name

      for the win.

      Cassius Clay vs. Kent Green

      FEBRUARY 26, 1958: GOLDEN GLOVES SEMIFINALS

      I was a little weary

      from hanging out

      the night before

      but that didn’t shake

      my confidence

      when I stepped

      into the ring,

      gliding like a bomber jet

      and launching punches

      like missiles.

      Thing was, Kent Green

      was a tank

      and he just brushed off

      my attack

      like you would

      a pesky fly

      at a picnic.

      The evening newspaper read:

      The sixteen-year-old pugilist

      from Louisville

      with his quick feet

      and a loud mouth

      showed promise

      in his first two fights

      but got outboxed

      by the older,

      more seasoned,

      hard-punching

      Kent Green.

      On the Phone with Lucky

      I might have lost

      but I’m still boss.

      I lost my stride

      but not my pride.

      I’m still here, and yeah,

      I’m comin’ home

      but this dream I got

      is set in stone:

      To be the best

      in the hemisphere.

      To win the Golden Gloves

      next year.

      How do I know?

      ’Cause Cassius is courageous,

      tenacious,

      and one day

      he’ll be

      the greatest.

      You hear that, Lucky?

      I’m coming home.

      ROUND TWO

      Maybe he didn’t win the Golden Gloves championship in Chicago that year—but my friend Cassius was still bound for greatness. He just knew it. And I knew it too. To tell the truth, I think losing that last fight made him work even harder. Made him focus. Nobody could focus like Cassius Clay. He didn’t let anything stand in his way. Not even a bottle of soda.

     

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