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Redemption Alley: How I Lived to Bowl Another Frame

Redemption Alley: How I Lived to Bowl Another Frame

Bob Perry
4.5/5 ( ratings)
"Religion," as the old saying goes, "is for people who don't want to go to hell. Spirituality is for those who have already been there." Bowling legend Bob Perry's life is a testament to that, because he has been there.

Perry was a skinny kid from North Jersey who at the age of 12 was said to have the potential to become the greatest bowler ever. But in 1970s Paterson, everybody knew somebody "connected." Training for championships? Fuhgeddabout it. Bob was busy driving for Uncle Raymond, doing jobs for Bobby Cabert, and hustling hundreds of thousands of dollars in after-hours "action bowling" for the last Don, John Gotti. Perry's links to organized crime would later land him in federal prison, but not before he became hopelessly addicted to crack cocaine, alcohol, and painkillers and homeless on the streets of Manhattan. Ultimately, Perry washed up on the shores of St. Christopher's Inn, a shelter run by Franciscan monks. It was there that he had six fateful encounters with an angelic messenger who no one else could see-a monk whose message was so powerful that Bob Perry has now been sober for 21 years.

In Redemption Alley, Perry not only shares his remarkable story of bowling success, his dangerous association with hoodlums and gangsters, and his recovery from addiction, but also his inspiring, decades-long spiritual quest.
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Rodale Books
Release
September 08, 2015
ISBN
1623365228
ISBN 13
9781623365226

Redemption Alley: How I Lived to Bowl Another Frame

Bob Perry
4.5/5 ( ratings)
"Religion," as the old saying goes, "is for people who don't want to go to hell. Spirituality is for those who have already been there." Bowling legend Bob Perry's life is a testament to that, because he has been there.

Perry was a skinny kid from North Jersey who at the age of 12 was said to have the potential to become the greatest bowler ever. But in 1970s Paterson, everybody knew somebody "connected." Training for championships? Fuhgeddabout it. Bob was busy driving for Uncle Raymond, doing jobs for Bobby Cabert, and hustling hundreds of thousands of dollars in after-hours "action bowling" for the last Don, John Gotti. Perry's links to organized crime would later land him in federal prison, but not before he became hopelessly addicted to crack cocaine, alcohol, and painkillers and homeless on the streets of Manhattan. Ultimately, Perry washed up on the shores of St. Christopher's Inn, a shelter run by Franciscan monks. It was there that he had six fateful encounters with an angelic messenger who no one else could see-a monk whose message was so powerful that Bob Perry has now been sober for 21 years.

In Redemption Alley, Perry not only shares his remarkable story of bowling success, his dangerous association with hoodlums and gangsters, and his recovery from addiction, but also his inspiring, decades-long spiritual quest.
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
Publisher
Rodale Books
Release
September 08, 2015
ISBN
1623365228
ISBN 13
9781623365226

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