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Hardcover Baseball and the Baby Boomer: A History, Commentary, and Memoir Book

ISBN: 1933979267

ISBN13: 9781933979267

Baseball and the Baby Boomer: A History, Commentary, and Memoir

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Tapping into the nostalgic era of feel-good baseball in the late 1940s and moving up to the Mitchell report, this collection documents the story of baseball as seen through the eyes and experiences of... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Great Baseball Book

Some great stories in this book. I would recommend it to any baseball fan. Some cheaper New copies on [...] for those looking to purchase. Only [...] bucks for a new copy of this book. [...]

RICK "SHAQ" GOLDSTEIN SAYS: "BASEBALL HELPS SOME ADULTS NEVER GROW UP!"

The author Talmage Boston is a lawyer as well as a writer and like many of us men who never grew up... he had dreamed of being a Major League baseball player. For him... writing this book about players from his generation is as close as he will come to the big leagues. For me... reading books like this and writing reviews is as close as I'll come. Talmage (In a normal review I probably would have used the author's last name here instead of his first... but being that his last name is Boston... the potential reader might get confused and think I'm talking about the Red Sox or the city. And by the way... that's how Boston... became Boston's favorite team when he was a young boy growing up in Texas. Seeing his last name ("Boston") on the front of the Red Sox's road jerseys... resulted in Boston's favorite team being Boston.). (Wooo! Glad that part of the review is over.) And of course if the Red Sox were the author's favorite team during those years... then the odds are quite high... that the "YAZ"- Carl Yastrzemski would be his favorite player. But more on that later. Let's first define what "those years" consisted of. The author and I both are part of the "BABY-BOOMER" generation. The first thing I learned from this book is that the time period that defines the "BABY-BOOMER" generation is a longer period than I would have guessed. The author lists those magical years as 1946 thru 1964... off the top of my head I would have thought it was approximately 1946 thru about 1956... but lo and behold... according to the internet the author is correct. The author divides the book into nine chapters that are really nine short stories. The subjects of these short stories are: "MICKEY MANTLE & JIMMY PIERSALL"... which basically describes Father and son relationships going wrong. "YAZ & THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM"... the author's favorite childhood player and his TRIPLE CROWN season leading the Red Sox to the 1967 World Series. "JACKIE ROBINSON & BRANCH RICKEY"... the integration of baseball... and it's interesting to note that Jackie was my all-time idol... and the author attempts to cover his entire lifetime in a restricted space. In my opinion this is fine if the reader is a pedestrian fan... rather than the type of fanatical fan that the author himself and I both claim to be. "NOLAN RYAN"... detailing his record breaking career. "BART GIAMATTI"... the former Commissioner Of Baseball who was famous for loving baseball with the eloquence of a great poet... who was forced to suspend Pete Rose for tarnishing the game that we all love... and the fact that Rose's transgressions were anything but poetic... is probably what killed the Commissioner. "COOPERSTOWN & THE HALL OF FAME"... this shrine to baseball and young boy's dreams... seen through a boy's heart... that still resides inside of all "BABY-BOOMER" boys that just happen to be over fifty-years-old. "ROGER MARIS"... the man who despite threats of asterisks... and the ghost of "THE BABE"... and eight ex

Only a game?

Baseball; love it, hate it, or just tolerate it, has certainly made its impact on out culture. Mr. Boston takes a few of the game's stars and one commissioner, exposes their exploits and Achilles heels in a way that makes them seem like the "guy next door." For someone like me that loves the game of baseball it is inspiring to see how a man like Nolan Ryan can be hit in the mouth in the first inning of a game (later would require eight stitches to close the gash) with a bouncing ball off the bat of Bo Jackson, yet pitch into the eighth inning with blood streaming down his uniform giving up only three hits. These stories are about courage, determination, focus, failure, and overcoming failure; the things that make America great! It is a quick read and I could not put it down.

Non-fiction page-turner

I cannot remember finishing such a good book so quickly. A non-fiction page-turner. Captivating! Well researched and written, original choices of subject matter, palpable passion.
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