57 pages 1 hour read

Jon Krakauer

Where Men Win Glory: The Odyssey of Pat Tillman

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 2009

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Key Figures

Pat Tillman

Pat Tillman was an American football player who left his sports career to enlist in the Army after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001; he was killed in Afghanistan in 2004. Pat Tillman was a bright, extremely active, and adventurous young man who grew up in a nonreligious family in northern California. Tillman learned early that to compensate for his stature, he had to be especially intense and intimidating on the field, even if he was emotionally sensitive. He earned the reputation of being alpha in the packs with which he ran.

In high school, Tillman was involved in numerous fights but was never considered a bully. However, after he lost control of himself in a serious fist fight, Tillman spent time in juvenile jail. This was a formative experience that instilled a deeper maturity in him, as well as a love for reading. Tillman was relentlessly self-improving and deeply devoted to honesty, integrity, and bravery. Challenging himself to the extreme both physically and mentally, he was also humble and championed for the underdog. He married his high school sweetheart, Marie, and lived modestly despite the means to do otherwise as a successful NFL player.

Part of Tillman’s later decision to trade the NFL for the Army stemmed from a family tradition of military service: Tillman’s great-grandfather served at Pearl Harbor.