
American Kings
A Biography of the Quarterback
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Narrated by:
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Seth Wickersham
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By:
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Seth Wickersham
Pull back the curtain on the most powerful position in all of sports: the Quarterback, the American equivalent of royalty, long glamorized, mythologized and worshiped.
The New York Times best-selling author of It’s Better to be Feared examines football’s QB lifecycle: high school, college, the NFL, retirement—and all that comes with it.
Before the Super Bowl trophies, massive contracts, brand deals, and millions of social media followers comes the dream. From the backyard to Pop Warner to high school to college, becoming the ultimate American idol requires single-minded focus while navigating a maze of bad breaks, insecurities, jealousy, pressure, and fame.
Wickersham’s fresh reporting goes deep into that journey—and beyond, measuring the distance between what the men who have done it expected and what they found. Through unprecedented access into the lives of dozens of quarterbacks and generational greats such as Johnny Unitas, John Elway, Peyton Manning, Warren Moon, Steve Young, Patrick Mahomes, and others, as well as those striving to be remembered, like Caleb Williams and Arch Manning, Wickersham reveals how this one position has become emblematic of success in American life.
An inside look at the drama, demands, sacrifice and glory that comes with playing quarterback, American Kings is a must-listen not just for sports fans, but for anyone who wants to understand what the quest for achievement and status tells us about the price of ambition.
©2025 Seth Wickersham (P)2025 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















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But as a book, there are some issues. It does not have chapters. It jumps around from one protagonist to the next. One minute he is discussing high school prodigy Collin Hurley and the next he is telling story about Tittle or some other great from years ago. It's quite a mishmash.
Another irritation is that some stories are carried through to 2025 (Hurley and Elway) and others are not. Arch Manning's story ends with high school, and no mention of his first two years at UT, where he was mostly on the bench.
It also did not help--at least for me--that the author spent quite a bit of time (mainly at the beginning) discussing his efforts to play quarterback in high school. I guess it is supposed to show why the author claims to identify with quarterbacks, but it probably should have been left elsewhere.
Some Great Stories Here, But ...
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Very in-depth perspective from the most high profile position in sports
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NFL Royalty
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He went deep!
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Seemed like it would be interesting…
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