The Last Bell, Donald McRae
The Last Bell, Donald McRae
List: $31.99 | Sale: $22.40
Club: $15.99

The Last Bell
Life, Death and Boxing

Author: Donald McRae

Narrator: Ronald McIntosh

Unabridged: 16 hr 22 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/13/2025


Synopsis

Shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year 2025

'Thoroughly encapsulates the current state of the hurt business' Telegraph, Best Books of 2025 

For fifty years Donald McRae has followed boxing. As criminality and corruption spread, his love for the sport dimmed. In 2018, grieving his sister’s death and his parents’ illness, he turned back to boxing – just as Tyson Fury’s improbable resurrection proved the ring could still offer redemption.

McRae takes us close to champions including Fury, Canelo Álvarez, Katie Taylor and Oleksandr Usyk. He doesn’t shy away from exploring huge themes – doping, state repression, war – and he doesn’t flinch from recording the thudding hits or the heartbreak a fighter feels in defeat. And in telling the devastating story of Patrick Day, he confronts death in the ring.

The Last Bell is McRae’s most personal and unflinching book, a clear-eyed reckoning with life and the sport he can’t let go.

‘Exhilarating and terrifying’ Herald 

About Donald McRae

Donald McRae is an award-winning author of fourteen non-fiction books which have featured sporting icons, legendary trial lawyers, heart surgeons and South Africa. He has twice won the William Hill Sports Book of the Year – the UK's most prestigious sports book prize – and ten national awards for his journalism at the Guardian


Reviews

Goodreads review by Dewi on March 30, 2025

Here’s a fact: you need less than two hands to count how many real boxing writers there are left today. Almost everyone seems to be in the pocket of a promoter, broadcaster, or murderous dictatorship. That this will be the author’s last book about the sport is a shame, part of me hopes it sets up a......more

Goodreads review by Christopher on March 16, 2025

A wonderful book. It jumps between a series of narrative threads but is held together masterfully. I always thought McRae must have an interesting personal story, and here he opens up about himself, albeit with much tragedy and worry too. It becomes clear towards the end that this is also a very cou......more

Goodreads review by Markod0101 on April 08, 2025

Really good read. McRae is a journalist in a world of clickbait and YouTube chumminess, and his empathy as a human being shines through. Some fascinating insight, but with few good stories a real snapshot of how boxing can chew you up and spit you out.......more

Goodreads review by Brennan on March 27, 2025

A fantastic synopsis about being a boxing fan through the ups and downs of boxing and life. Incredible book.......more

Goodreads review by Paul on April 14, 2025

Another classic boxing book by Donald McRae..heartfelt, insightful & compelling...bringing truth & shining a light on the 'Dark Trade'......more


Quotes

‘Boxing’s grim appeal is revisited by one of its finest chroniclers, alongside a more personal story of loss and grief. Drawn back into the fight game by Tyson Fury’s redemption story, McRae takes us ringside to some thrilling bouts. It’s full of tender insight, and thoroughly encapsulates the current state of the hurt business’ 

‘As with the sport itself, boxing writing is about so much more than physical combat – it’s about the dark drama of life and death in their totality. That Donald McRae understands this implicitly makes him one of the very best writers working today. I’ll read anything he turns his hand to.’  

'Every new book about boxing by Donald McRae is cause for celebration. Nobody does it better.'

‘About life, death and boxing, McRae beautifully melds those constituent parts, then transcends them, to recount a profound journey through the human experience in a way that only a writer of his immense talent and humanity could. Exceptional and unique. I can’t recommend it enough.’ 

Nobody writes about boxing like Don McRae. But with The Last Bell he has written a book that moves beyond just boxing and grapples instead with what it truly means to fight.  It is a book about knowing when to bite down and keep swinging, about knowing when to throw in the towel, a book about loss and defeat, and how we might, in the final reckoning, face those inevitabilities with a kind of a redeeming grace.’ 

‘Don McRae has spent fifty years in thrall to the fight game. The Last Bell is at once a moving memoir and McRae's swansong as a boxing writer--a fine, vivid, and searching tribute to a sport than can be as lethal as it is uplifting.’ 

‘The Last Bell is heart-pounding and enraging, and yet somehow tender, too, full of the grace and wisdom that comes from decades of observing and reflecting on boxing (and sport, competition, spectacle, in general). Reading about Patrick Day’s devastating final bout, I was pacing my office. Thrilling and raw, this is sport writing at its best, but also much more than that. McRae crafts an urgent and unforgettable meditation on risk, loss, and our enduring hunger to find meaning in struggle: a subject that captivates and brings together readers and writers of all kinds.’ 

A beautiful, gripping, always surprising book about sport, life, boxing, men, women, art, ageing, family and why we get lost in things. Don McRae is a champion of sports writing. This book is a relentlessly absorbing mix of detail, humour, sadness, wisdom and colour from a life lived in that world.’  

‘If Dark Trade was about one man wanting to find out what it is to fight and how it feels to lose, The Last Bell is about a man who is now familiar with these things through personal experience using boxing as a reminder that he is not alone in feeling the emotions attached to them.  
McRae’s eyes may be wearier and slightly narrower now, but when you see modern-day boxing through them there is a surprising and refreshing clarity to be found. It is a clarity hard to find anywhere else these days and McRae, 29 years after Dark Trade, continues to write about boxing with an elegance, intelligence and maturity and again delivers the definitive text on where we are today. The Last Bell is a book plenty of people need to read but only one person could have written.’ 
 

The Last Bell is an unforgettable book. Its portraiture is akin to that of the finest novelists, and its reflections on life, death, loss and decency-under-duress are profound and moving. McRae unveils the grim realities of the industrialised brutality of boxing. He shows us the vain and cruel who seek to profiteer from and corrupt the sport, but he shows us also, with what amounts to brotherly love, those who act with daring, respect and honour. This book, which is laced through with bravery and tenderness, goes to the depths of life and death and back. Boxing, sport even, is fortunate to have a laureate such as this.’