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Paperback Viva Baseball!: Latin Major Leaguers and Their Special Hunger Book

ISBN: 0252067126

ISBN13: 9780252067129

Viva Baseball!: Latin Major Leaguers and Their Special Hunger

(Part of the Sport and Society Series)

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Book Overview

Lively and filled with vivid anecdotes, Viva Baseball chronicles the struggles of Latin American professional baseball players in the United States from the late 1800s to the present.

As Latino players, managers, and owners continue to blossom into baseball's biggest stars, they have benefited from a growing Spanish-language media, a group identity, an increase in financial leverage and attention, and a burgeoning Latino culture...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Great read!

Excellent book about a side of baseball that is not often analyse, I really recomend this one...

A MUST READ FOR ANY BASEBALL HISTORY FAN

Dr. Regalado did an amazing job with this book. It is a must read for any person that enjoys the history of baseball. Regalado wrote about a topic that doesn't get much attention and did so wonderfully.

"Viva Baseball" works on a multitude of levels.

"Viva Baseball! Latin Major Leaguers and Their Special Hunger" is a nearly effortless and highly entertaining read. Sam Regalado has managed to accomplished something very special: He has written a book for just about the full spectrum of the sports minded. Even if you're tangentially interested in baseball, you are likely to be griped by this heart warming story, which encompasses the hardships faced by Latin American baseball players, along with their "special hunger" to succeed, and finally their eventual triumph that gained them acceptance into North American professional baseball. For those students of history, Dr. Regalado, who teaches history at California State University,Stanislaus, manages to deftly weave in the important social /political and international events that shaped both the United States and the entire Western Hemisphere in the twentieth century. His treatment of the Cuban Missile Crisis, immigration trends and policies in the United States, and the tumult of Latin American politics, not to mention the farm workers movement led by Cesar Chavez and the racial politics of the 1960's in America, is clear, concise, and provides the reader with yet another lens from which to view these seminal events. Lest we forget this is a serious scholarly work, yet one that even neophyte students of history will find friendly."Viva Baseball" brings a big smile to the faces of baseball fans as well, especially those who either lived the glory years of the 60's or have since become aficionados. He paints the legends of the San Francisco Giants, such as Juan Marichal (Dominican Republic), Orlando Cepeda (Puerto Rico) and Jose Pagan (Cuba) with such realism by relating fascinating anecdotes that reveal their struggles as dark skin immigrants to a largely hostile racial and nativistic society, and their amazing accomplishments both on and off the field. We witness a side of the great Robert Clemente hitherto hardly offered for popular consumption. He was portrayed by the press in Pittsburgh as aloof, temperamental and even hypochondriac. Clemente's sullenness was in reality a normal reaction to the racism he and other players faced and the unwarranted jabs thrown at him by sports writers. The true measure of the man was both in his classy prowess on the field and in his efforts to help those less fortunate, such as the event that claimed his life in 1973. The plane crash and sorrowful aftermath of Robert Clemente's death are portrayed with great emotion.My favorite story is of Luis Tiant Jr. Cold War politics isolated the Cuban member of the Boston Red Sox from his parents for fifteen years, until 1975 when Senator George McGovern apparently convinced Fidel Castro to allow Tiants to visit their son in Boston. The city of Boston, not known for its racial tolerance, rolled out the red carpet. Luis senior, who once objected to his son playing baseball in the U.S. because of p

A Valuable Resource in the Baseball Bibliography

Latin American ballplayers found the society in the United States a lonely and trouble-filled plight. They were targets of racism and unjust treatment. Despite their prowness on the base paths, the Latino baseball player was subject to the "Jim Crow" South every much as his African-American counterpart.Dr. Regalado provides an in-depth perspective on the Latin American ball player from the turn-of-the-century to the "Latin Explosion" of the 1960s, to the rise of "Fernandomania" of the early 1980s. Regalado's work, more importantly, is a construct of the social issues of American culture as seen through the eyes of the dark-skinned foreigner. This book is an important work in the baseball bibliography, moreover it belongs among the books of American Social history. Latino ball players of today's era would do themselves a favor by reading this book and understanding the roots of their past.
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