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American author (born 1971) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Matthew Polly is an American author and former martial artist who writes about martial arts. His books include American Shaolin, Tapped Out, and Bruce Lee: A Life.
Matthew Polly | |
---|---|
Born | Topeka, Kansas, United States | May 5, 1971
Occupation | Author |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Princeton University |
Genre | Nonfiction |
Notable works | American Shaolin (book) Tapped Out (book) Bruce Lee: A Life (book) |
Notable awards | Lowell Thomas Award |
Polly graduated from Topeka West High School.[1] In 1992, at the age of 21 years, Polly took a leave of absence from Princeton University and traveled to China to train at the Shaolin Temple, the birthplace of Chan (Zen) Buddhism and kung fu.[1] Feng Yingbiao of Master Insight wrote that Polly's training at the Shaolin Temple was merely a crash course designed to lure laowai, attendance of which does not lead to expertise in Chinese culture.[2]
In exchange for $1,300 a month Polly was allowed to stay and train with the monks. He spent two years at the temple and became the first American accepted as a Shaolin disciple.[3] His experiences included training seven hours a day six days a week, involving running, breathing exercises, calisthenics, kung fu and gymnastics. He became a formidable kickboxer, and won a challenge match against a kung fu master from another province. He also became an "iron forearm" expert, where his arm became impervious to pain by calluses formed by bashing his arm against a tree for 30 minutes per day.[3]
April 13, 2005, he appeared as a guest on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.[4]
In 2003, Polly wrote a series of travel articles about his experiences in China for the online magazine Slate.com, "Return to the Shaolin Temple",[5] and again in 2004 with a series on Monroe Elementary School in Topeka, Kansas.[6]
American Shaolin: Flying Kicks, Buddhist Monks, and the Legend of Iron Crotch: An Odyssey in the New China was published in 2007 by Gotham in the United States and Abacus in the United Kingdom.[7] In the book, Polly discusses his experiences in China living, studying, and performing with Shaolin monks.[7]
The book received several accolades:
Tapped Out: Rear Naked Chokes, the Octagon, and the Last Emperor : an Odyssey in Mixed Martial Arts was published in 2012 by Gotham Books.[15] The book follows Polly's experience as a middle-aged amateur Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) fighter.[15]
Bruce Lee: A Life was published in 2019 by Simon & Schuster and is a biography of Bruce Lee's life. It is the result of years of research, with interviews with over a hundred people, including Bruce Lee’s wife and daughter.[16]
The New York Times named the book as the actor and martial artist's "definitive" biography.[17] Publishers Weekly said the book was "thorough [and] well-sourced."[18] IndieBound compiles a list of 24 favorable reviews, including the ones from CNN, Kirkus Reviews, Booklist, Associated Press, Library Journal, San Francisco Chronicle, The Seattle Times, Shelf Awareness, and biographers like Jonathan Eig, Jimmy McDonough, and Brian Jay Jones.[19] Writing in Master-Insight, Feng Yingbiao criticized the book for promoting a "Eurocentric" worldview and a lack of fact-checking, particularly criticizing Polly's allegation in the book that Lee was of Jewish ancestry.[2]
This book has been translated into Spanish by Dojo Ediciones, part of Editorial Océano de México. It received favorable reviews from CineNuevaTribuna.es (Spanish online cinema magazine)[20] and TheObjective.com (Spanish online newspaper).[21]
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