The Best Football eBooks of All Time

Discover the most influential football ebooks, recommended by leaders, experts, and readers worldwide

We may earn commissions for purchases made via this page.
Recommendations by Sam Altman, Jack Dorsey, Ken Blanchard, Noah Kagan and 122 others
1
Book Cover of Jeff Benedict - The Dynasty

By Jeff Benedict – New York Times bestselling author (you?) 

4.98
| 2020 | 592 Pages
Best for Sports enthusiasts and business professionals.
Detailed Research
Captivating Storytelling
Emotional Depth
Insightful
  • New York Times Bestseller
  • Now a 10-part docuseries on Apple TV+
Recommended by Peter King, Colin Cowherd, Boston Herald and 7 others
Peter King - MMQB
Most often in our business, there are writers and there are reporters, and rarely do the twain meet. In The Dynasty, Jeff Benedict shows he’s masterful at both. His reporting on the very well-worn (trust me) earth of the Patriots’ greatness is groundbreaking, starting with his illumination of the evening in the hospital in 2001 when Drew Bledsoe’s life was in peril and going all the way through to previously unknown details of the emotional play-by-play of Tom Brady’s departure from New England. The imagery and prose are just as strong. Such a great read from Benedict
Colin Cowherd - The Herd Host and New York Times Bestselling Author
The Dynasty is Jeff Benedict's latest masterpiece. . . . It's a relationship book, it's a football book, it's a business book. . . . I was surprised at the level of detail in Robert Kraft's quotes and his willingness to allow [the book] to go to some pretty painful places. . . . If you love football the way I do, you'll just eat up these stories
A page-turner for Patriots fans. There are plenty of behind-the-scenes, untold nuggets, along with more detailed versions of often-told stories that have taken place during Robert Kraft’s ownership of the team. . . . It was as if Benedict was a fly on the wall for many of these significant events, and in some cases, he was in fact present to witness some indelible moments
An epic business story . . . The Dynasty goes deeper than anyone has before on the Beatles-esque collaboration among an owner, a coach, and a star player
Smart, engaging . . . Action-packed . . . Benedict has long blended two interests—sports and business—and the Patriots are emblematic of both. . . . Good reading for organization builders as well as Pats fans
Show 5 more reviews
2
Book Cover of John Feinstein - A Civil War: Army vs. Navy: A Year Inside College Football's Purest Rivalry

By John Feinstein – Bestselling sports author and commentator (you?) 

4.96
| 412 Pages
Best for Sports enthusiasts and college football fans.
Compelling Story
Well-Researched
Insightful
Engaging Narrative
  • New York Times Bestseller
  • Rated Amazon Best Book of the Year
Recommended by John Feinstein, Publisher's Weekly, Library Journal and 2 others
John Feinstein - New York Times bestselling author of A Season on the Brink and coauthor, with Red Auerbach, of Let Me Tell You a Story
Fans of Yale-Harvard--or, for that matter, of Tennessee State-Grambling--may disagree with sports author John Feinstein's subtitle, but this look inside the Cadet-Midshipmen wars backs up the idea of the annual Army-Navy game as a purer expression of the ideal of college athletics than your basic Poulan Weed-Eater Bowl. Feinstein focuses on the defensive captains from each 1995 squad, young men whose football careers end with the final gun of the big game. In a year when the service academies are enjoying their biggest gridiron success in many seasons, Feinstein's ruminations on the game seem particularly timely
Although neither Army nor Navy is a college football power anymore, their annual rivalry still attracts national attention, and the game between the two service academies is the most important contest for both schools every season. In chronicling the 1995 game (the 96th meeting between the two teams), Feinstein (A Good Walk Spoiled) provides readers with a comprehensive backdrop to the game by recounting the events leading up to Army vs. Navy. Given almost unlimited access to the players and coaches, Feinstein does a superb job of capturing the emotional and physical impact the long season has on the team members of both sides, while also giving a taste of what life is like at Annapolis and West Point. Feinstein focuses his story by concentrating on a number of players at the two schools, providing brief backgrounds and their reasons for attending the academies. Among the players featured are Army's Jim Cantelupe and the offensive linemen nicknamed "The Fat Men," as well as Navy's Andrew Thompson and Chris McCoy. Providing an extra touch of drama is the fact that 1995 was the last year of Army coach Bob Sutton's contract, and his future at the school would be determined by the Cadets' performance in the Navy game. It is to Feinstein's credit that, although the outcome is already in the history books, he builds a sense of excitement and anticipation throughout the book about what would happen in the contest. (Army won.)
Feinstein has a formula: He gets on the inside of a sport and reports what happens over a period of time. He has done it for golf (A Good Walk Spoiled, LJ 2/15/95), tennis, basketball, baseball, and now college football. In this latest endeavor, he examines the rivalry surrounding the annual Army-Navy football game. Feinstein follows both institutions through the 1995 season and, as with all his books, he writes about much more than just the sport. In examining the military academies, Feinstein puts the reader there, describing daily routines for cadets and midshipmen. Part of what makes the book stand out is that the players involved are true scholar-athletes; they are not using their schools as a stepping-stone to the pros. Highly recommended for athletes and their parents, and for all public and high school libraries
Feinstein, author of the bestselling A Good Walk Spoiled (1995), again delivers the goods, this time chronicling the 1995 season of the West Point and Annapolis football teams, culminating in their annual game. Once a contest that factored heavily in deciding the national college football championship, the annual Army-Navy showdown has gradually been relegated to something approaching sideshow status. Still, to Cadets and Midshipmen alike, no other event during the year means as much as the chance to wrest honor from their rival academy. Feinstein sets the scene by recounting how rigid military discipline and withering academic standards combine to make football at West Point and Annapolis unlike football at any other division I schools. As one former coach says, ``At every other school in America, the hardest part of any football player's day is football practice. At the military academies, the easiest part of a football player's day is football practice.'' Going into the 1995 season, Army and Navy seemed to be headed in opposite directions. Rocked by a series of academic scandals and other tragedies, Navy's morale was low. The West Point team, by contrast, seemed to be brimming with optimism and spirit. During the course of the season, however, both teams played with enough grit and skill to restore some luster to their somewhat tarnished football reputations. Both pulled off a few upsets; both won most of the games they were supposed to win; both lost close games to their mutual pigskin rival, Notre Dame. For Navy, however, the season's real goal was to break Army's recent stranglehold on the series. Army also had a lot at stake: namely, the chance for the team's seniors to be the first Cadet class since 1948 to go 4-0 against Navy. The game, a narrow one-point victory for Army, provided a stunning climax to the season. It also supplies a stirring ending for this exceptional book
Feinstein has written books on basketball coach Bobby Knight, the pro golf tour, the pro tennis tour, and major-league baseball. This time he has chosen a topic less likely to achieve massive commercial success but one that appears to have been a labor of love. The Army-Navy football games were once showcases for powerful teams and great players. But times change. The service academies play big-time football schedules but can't compete for top recruits. The result is often poor records and lopsided scores. But it takes a special type of recruit to attend the service academies, and those young men are the focus of Feinstein's examination of one year leading up to the Army-Navy game. He sets the stage with an overview of daily life at the academies, emphasizing the extraordinary academic demands and psychological stress endured by the students, especially the first-year plebes. The discipline often seems arbitrary, but the young men endure it for the joy of playing the game at a competitive level that may have been out of their reach had they attended a conventional institution. Feinstein laces his overview with anecdotal profiles of the players and coaches on both sides that will leave readers unsure of whom to root for when the big game arrives. Amid an extensive body of fine work, this is arguably Feinstein's best. Highly recommended
Football Book made by AI

By TailoredRead – AI that creates personalized books for you 

4.98
| 2025 | 30-300 pages
Learn Football faster with a book created specifically for you by state-of-the-art AI. Our AI has vast knowledge of Football, and will craft a custom-tailored book for you in just 10 minutes. This tailored book addresses YOUR unique interests, goals, knowledge level, and background. Available for online reading, PDF download, and Kindle, your custom book will provide personalized insights to help you learn faster, expand your horizons, and accomplish your goals. Embark on your Football learning journey with a personalized book - made exclusively for you.
Best for all readers across all knowledge levels.
Insightful
Focused
Highly Personalized
Actionable
Up-to-Date
  • World's Leading Platform for AI-Created Books
You will:
  • Get a Football book tailored to your interests, goals, and background
  • Receive a book precisely matching your background and level of knowledge
  • Select which topics you want to learn, exclude the topics you don't
  • Define your learning goals and let your book guide you to accomplish them
  • Get all the knowledge you need consolidated into a single focused book
3
Book Cover of Jeff Duncan, Steve Gleason - Payton and Brees: The Men Who Built the Greatest Offense in NFL History

By Jeff Duncan – Columnist for The Athletic New Orleans (you?) and 1 more 

4.96
| 2020 | 304 Pages
Best for Football fans and sports enthusiasts.
Insightful
Well-Researched
Engaging
Nostalgic
  • New York Times Bestseller
  • Rated Amazon Best Book of the Year
Recommended by Mike Garafolo and Tim Kawakami
Mike Garafolo - Reporter, NFL Network. Co-host GMFB Weekend. Distant cousin of JimmyG 10. No relation to Pep Guardiola. IG: mike_garafolo
Congrats to all time great dude JeffDuncan_ on his new book. Adding to the shelf right now. (I also plan to read it soon.) Know this will be a great one
Tim Kawakami - Tim Kawakami is the editor-in-chief of TheAthleticSF
I heard about 1% of it from Jeff last season and was ready to buy it then... This is no doubt a great book
Loading
Category:
Choose a different view: