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Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football
Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football

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Author: Jim Dent
Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
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New (32) Used (21) Collectible (1) from $4.44

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 45203

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 8.2 x 2.3

ISBN: 0312308728
Dewey Decimal Number: 796.33262097645315
EAN: 9780312308728
ASIN: 0312308728

Publication Date: September 4, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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  • Paperback - Twelve Mighty Orphans: The Inspiring True Story of the Mighty Mites Who Ruled Texas Football
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  • Kindle Edition - Twelve Mighty Orphans

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Jim Dent, author of the New York Times bestselling The Junction Boys, returns with his most powerful story of human courage and determination.

More than a century ago, a school was constructed in Fort Worth, Texas, for the purpose of housing and educating the orphans of Texas Freemasons. It was a humble project that for years existed quietly on a hillside east of town. Life at the Masonic Home was about to change, though, with the arrival of a lean, bespectacled coach by the name of Rusty Russell. Here was a man who could bring rain in the midst of a drought. Here was a man who, in virtually no time at all, brought the orphans’ story into the homes of millions of Americans.
In the 1930s and 1940s, there was nothing bigger in Texas high school football than the Masonic Home Mighty Mites—a group of orphans bound together by hardship and death. These youngsters, in spite of being outweighed by at least thirty pounds per man, were the toughest football team around. They began with nothing—not even a football—yet in a few years were playing for the state championship on the highest level of Texas football. This is a winning tribute to a courageous band of underdogs from a time when America desperately needed fresh hope and big dreams.
The Mighty Mites remain a notable moment in the long history of American sports. Just as significant is the depth of the inspirational message. This is a profound lesson in fighting back and clinging to faith. The real winners in Texas high school football were not the kids from the biggest schools, or the ones wearing the most expensive uniforms. They were the scrawny kids from a tiny orphanage who wore scarred helmets and faded jerseys that did not match, kids coached by a devoted man who lived on peanuts and drove them around in a smoke-belching old truck.
In writing a story of unforgettable characters and great football, Jim Dent has come forward to reclaim his place as one of the top sports authors in America today.
A remarkable and inspirational story of an orphanage and the man who created one of the greatest football teams Texas has ever known . . . this is their story—the original Friday Night Lights.
“This just might be the best sports book ever written. Jim Dent has crafted a story that will go down as one of the most artistic, one of the most unforgettable, and one of the most inspirational ever. Twelve Mighty Orphans will challenge Hoosiers as the feel-good sports story of our lifetime. Naturally, being from Texas, I am biased. Hooray for the Mighty Mites.’’
—Verne Lundquist, CBS Sports

“Coach Rusty Russell and the Mighty Mites will steal your heart as they overcome every obstacle imaginable to become a respected football team. Take an orphanage, the Depression, and mix it with Texas high school football, and Jim Dent has authored another winner, this one about the ultimate underdog.’’
—Brent Musburger, ABC Sports/ESPN

“No state has a roll call of legendary high school football stories like we do in Texas, and, admittedly, some of those stories have been ‘expanded’ over the years when it comes to the truth. But let Jim Dent tell you about the Mighty Mites of Masonic Home, the pride of Fort Worth in the dark days of the Depression. Read this book. You will think it’s fiction. You will think it’s a Hollywood script. But Twelve Mighty Orphans is the truth, and nothing but. It is powerful stuff. Some eighty years later, the Mighty Mites’ story remains so sacred, not even a Texan would dare tamper with these facts. And Jim Dent tells it like it was.”
— Randy Galloway, columnist, Fort-Worth Star Telegram



Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars An Inspiring Story During Depressing Times   September 17, 2007
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I'm a native Texan and an avid football fan who played football in the southern panhandle area between Odessa and Lubbock and I had never heard this story. I'm thankful that Jim Dent wrote this book and you will be, too.

This is a story of struggle and perseverance during terrible times. The facts are how a rag-tag football team from an orphans home in the 1930's competed and won against the "big dogs" of Texas high school football. The heart of the story, though, is how this orphans home, Masonic Home, it's coach, Rusty Russell, and the players, usually only 12 on the team during any season, overcame harsh times and even harsher lives.

That these boys, who found themselves in this home after the deaths of one or both parents and who sometimes witnessed these deaths first-hand, played football at all is nothing short of fantastic. That they grew as young men under the mentorship of a caring coach is a testament to perseverance in the face of enormous odds...in other words, almost miraculous.

Throughout the book, the author sprinkles stories away from the football field to bring life at the Masonic Home into focus. The oil boom, depression, poverty, Texas football politics, Jack Dempsey, and even Seabiscuit all come together to relate the life and times of this school and football team.

If you're a native Texan, love football, or cheer for the underdog, you will thoroughly enjoy this book.



5 out of 5 stars The Mighty Mites Rule   November 10, 2007
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

In my opinion Twelve Mighty Orphans is absolutely the best sports nonfiction book to come along since Seabiscuit, An American Legend. And they both have a similar theme throughout - that of America's love for the underdog. You don't have to be a football expert to be rooting for the boys at the Home. The editorial review from Publisher's Weekly on this page that said "Dent's strength is his play-by-play accounts of key games, but descriptions of personal interactions are often forced and lifeless" is completely off the mark. The play-by-play is great, of course, and exciting. However, it's the back story of the underdogs that grew up at the Masonic Home and scrapped their way to winning while being transported to games on the bed of a wheezing old truck that brings it all together and makes the reader care passionately for the Mighty Mites. Without stories of what shaped the orphans before and after their coming to the Home it could very well have been like reading descriptions of games that were straight off the sports pages of a newspaper. My congrats to Jim Dent for making this story a feel-good winner.


5 out of 5 stars Must Read!   September 14, 2007
 2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. Dent does a great job of taking you back to another era and captures the spirit of these orphans who went against all odds to prove themselves. A bit of "Little Rascals" and a lot of character. You don't have to be a football fan to like "12 Mighty Orphans" - if you have ever rooted for the underdog, you will love this book. I'm getting one for my mother!


5 out of 5 stars 12 mighty orphans   October 17, 2007
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

I grew up in Ft. Worth in the late 40's & 50's and heard plenty about them from my father & his friends. This is one of the best sports books I've read & am surprised there never has been anything ever written about them before..




3 out of 5 stars Mighty mean, mighty depressing, mostly mad about football   January 16, 2008
 2 out of 5 found this review helpful

Set in depressing (but not necessarily economically depressed) Fort Worth, Texas 1928 to 1943, this is a initially heartwarming high school football story about a disparate, desperate crew of orphans that never really warms your heart. Dent opens with the murder of the father of four orphans in 1928. And then it's off to the school. Being outweighed, ill-equipped orphans, the Masonic Home Mighty Mites football team has three strikes against them and immediately deserve and earn a lot of sympathy. But the details make the orphans more unsavory and unsympathetic than one would imagine. They pride themselves on being mean, not just to opposing players, but also to each other. Their most reknowned pro football player earned recognition for being the "meanest" player to ever play pro football, not something I'd frame and write home about. They are brutal, blocking to injure. They perfect an almost lethal, lip-splitting hit - the Humper - that marks many of their opponents with split lips, missing teeth, and players carried from the field. Playing without faceguards, they exploit vulnerabilities of their much larger opponent, but the reader sometimes must wince at the thought of the clash. Dent repeatedly refers to "Twelve Mighty Orphans" but it was not clear to me that the team always or usually suited up only twelve players. He writes about the orphans being shoeless through half the year, but it is not clear that they ever played football that way. Their highly successful, quite humble coach, Rusty Russell, builds a lean, mean, fighting machine, but the team and their later lives show that building character may not have been so successful. Survival skills, yes. Character? I'm less sanguine. Maybe call them the Spartans, not the Mighty Mites.

On the dust cover, Brent Musburger says that the coach and team "steal your heart as they overcome every obstacle imaginable," but that is hyperbole. Yes, the odds were strongly against them. The rich and the powerful disdained the Mites and, more importantly, the Mites' success. The best teams earn resentment and that often turns into revenge, and I can easily imagine other obstacles. Plus, as other coaches noted, Russell had the advantage of 24 x 7 year-round access to and complete, absolutely authoritarian rule of the boys. Vince Lombardi's Packers had a summer idyll as compared to the training and school life the orphans suffered. Apparently, all of them started out hating the place (and, of course, missing their dead parent or parents), but they all seemed to convert to a love of the place based on a defensive, almost psychotic stance towards the more privileged, meaning the rest of the world.

The dialog often sounds like a bad Bowery Boys script. The physical and psychological abuse almost steams off the page, along with some of the excessive testosterone. One last note on poor copyediting: On p. 131, a missed kick by Jeff Brown leaves the Mites tied with Lubbock, 6 -6. Dent reminds us of that score, 6-6, on the following page. But when Lubbock's Shakespeare Sewalt scores and Lubbock converts the extra point, the score somehow becomes 13-7. Another Lubbock TD and PAT and on p. 134, the final is 20-6. Huh?


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