Messenger: The Legend of Muhammad Ali by Marc Bernardin illustrated by Ron Salas
I’m always curious how books about Muhammad Ali will present his “Islam” and this 240 page graphic novel was no exception. I was a little hesitant with the title, and with the foreword establishing that this book is akin to the heroic poems of Odysseus and Gilgamesh, and that “inspired by truth, and truth itself, aren’t the same thing.” I did appreciate that it says if you are going to take a test on Muhammad Ali and this is your only source, you will fail. It seems to recognize that Ali means a lot of very different things, to different people and this book at times is true and at times just feels true. Broken into 12 chapters, 12 rounds, the author offers sources in the back, but leaves wiggle room for creative liberty. I think if you are familiar with Ali’s life the book doesn’t provide anything shocking and you will enjoy seeing it play out in graphic novel form. If you aren’t familiar with him, the book is a little too choppy to paint a comprehensive biography and you will be confused and need outside clarification at times. I looked into the book before diving in, and many reviews say that the story makes his life accessible to middle grade and middle schoolers, the publisher says 10th-12th grade, and I think with the panel of a prostitute trying to talk to him, alcohol being offered to him, the recreation of him being positioned as a saint being martyred for a magazine cover shoot, comments about being with a lot of women, and some of the politics, the book is best suited for high schoolers.
SYNOPSIS:
Framed around the lighting of the Olympic torch in 1996 the book then goes back and fills in the gaps on some of the big events of Muhammad Ali’s life:
Round One: Schwinn. 1954. Having his bike stolen and being introduced to boxing.
Round Two: Olympian. 1960. Winning Olympic gold.
Round Three: Church. 1961. Meeting Malcolm X.
Round Four: Sonny Liston. 1964. The fight.
Round Five: Media. 1967. Interview with Howard Cosell.
Round Six: Martyr. 1968. Esquire cover shoot.
Round Seven: Defendant. 1971. Draft evasion charges and fight with Joe Frazier.
Round Eight: Candle. 1974. Meeting a child with leukemia.
Round Nine: Rumble. 1974. Rumble in the Jungle.
Round Ten: Patient. 1980. Early signs.
Round Eleven: Shepherd. 1990. Iraq hostage negotiations with Saddam Hussein.
Round Twelve: Survivor. 1996. Lighting the Olympic torch.
WHY I LIKE IT:
It does articulate that he parted ways with Nation of Islam in chapter 11, Elijah Muhammad and Nation of Islam is pretty prominent in the book up until then, and then in Iraq it does show him praying salat, mentioning the blessings of Allah swt in freeing the hostages, and noting he is going as the most recognizable Muslim American. I always enjoy reading about Ali and Cosell’s relationship, so I particularly enjoyed those scenes and like the premise of the book established, who knows if they are true, but they feel true and in many ways make Ali seem almost fictious with his equal parts arrogance, humility, humor, and insight. I had to do a bit of outside reading about the Esquire cover shoot, and the Iraq hostage situation, the book did not seem to make it clear, and got me to thinking perhaps some of the other chapters only seemed clear because I had read about those incidents before.
Normally I like books to be sourced and a book that is biographical to be accurate, but I almost wanted this book to just be extravagant. To have fun with the persona of Ali and make him into something of legend that the foreword seemed to hint at. What I thought was going to make him even more so “the greatest” seemed to just provide a safety net of protection to imagine what was going on in Ali’s head during the 12 rounds highlighted.
FLAGS:
There are some offers of alcohol which he refuses, some pointed political positions, a prostitute in a hallway invites him for free, he refuses. He recreates a martyr scene even once he established he was Muslim and wasn’t ok with it, but a phone call to Elijah Muhammad’s son, made it ok because it was for money, there is a lot to unpack there for kids. He makes a comment about being with a lot of women at one point, not in your face, but in a graphic novel, to dedicate a panel to it, makes it stand out. Racism, hate, bigotry, prejudice.
TOOLS FOR LEADING THE DISCUSSION:
I am a bit on the fence with this book. I think it would work for a high school book club, but with a lot of context. If you are discussing Ali, this would be a suitable supplement in a high school classroom. If you are an English teacher talking about Homer and heroic poetry, I think this would be a great contemporary example. I don’t know that I would stop mature middle schoolers from reading it, but I don’t know that I would be suggesting it either.
If the book seems like a good fit for you, you can order it here.