Average customer rating:
- The Great Bambino
- An impressive home run of a book
- research and more research
- A Wonderful Look at the Sultan of Swat
- Best Book to date on MY GRANDFATHER
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The Year Babe Ruth Hit 104 Home Runs: Recrowning Baseball's Greatest Slugger
Bill Jenkinson
Manufacturer: Carroll & Graf
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Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 0786719060 |
Book Description
In an unprecedented look at Babe Ruth’s amazing batting power, sure to inspire debate among baseball fans of every stripe, one of the country's most respected and trusted baseball historians reveals the amazing conclusions of more than twenty years of research. Jenkinson takes readers through Ruth's 1921 season, in which his pattern of battled balls would have accounted for more than 100 home runs in today's ballparks and under today's rules. Yet, 1921 is just tip of the iceberg, for Jenkinson's research reveals that during an era of mammoth field dimensions Ruth hit more 450-plus-feet shots than anybody in history, and the conclusions one can draw are mind boggling.
Customer Reviews:
The Great Bambino.......2007-10-22
I didnt know if I would enjoy this book or not since I am such a visual person. However this book made me wish I could travel back in time just to see this giant of a man play one game. Babe Ruth, IMO, is simply the greatest ballplayer ever to pick up a bat. The author is detailed, accurate, and gives a great sense of just how great Babe really was. McGuire, Bonds, Aaron, Rodriguez dont hold a candle to the man who made the game what it is today.
An impressive home run of a book.......2007-09-08
If you've read "The Big Bam" by Leigh Montville and/or "Babe" by Robert Creamer, you owe it to yourself to read Bill Jenkinson's book. Although you may think it's not possible, Ruth was a better slugger than you ever imagined. He was truly one of a kind.
Jenkinson's book is interesting, fascinating and meticulously well researched. He spent more than 25 years researching each of Ruth's home runs, during spring training, the regular season, post season and on barnstorming tours.
Part of Jenkinson's book details Ruth's "hidden career" of exhibition games. Jenkinson calculates that Ruth participated in 800 exhibition games in six countries, 42 states and more than 200 cities. He blasted more than 300 homers in those games. In 1921, Ruth played an unbelievable total of 207 games. A consummate showman, Ruth kept an incredible schedule, not to mention his off-the-field activities.
Jenkinson focuses on Ruth's power and superlatives. The Bambino didn't hit many routine home runs. Most fans really don't comprehend how spacious the ballparks were in Ruth's days. Jenkinson calculates that Ruth walloped 22 fly outs that traveled more than 450 feet. No one has ever hit as many balls as far as Ruth. What he could do in today's ballparks is unfathomable.
Jenkinson spends 70 pages near the end of the book discussing comparative difficulty of Ruth's home run feats compared to today's game, drawing conclusions and making projections. Stadium photographs showing where some of Ruth's monumental homers landed are particularly interesting and impressive.
research and more research.......2007-07-23
Any historian or student of history must engage in countless hours of research in order to convincingly prove his thesis. Mr. Jenkinson succeeds with flying colors. The most fascinating section of this book is the one dealing with comparative difficulty. Jenkinson leaves no doubt that Ruth played under much more adverse conditions than modern day sluggers. I telephoned Mr. Jenkinson about a couple of points of comparison not mentioned in his book that had me wondering. One was the fact that Ruth played against only 7 teams and faced pitchers much more frequently (4-man rotations) than today's players. Could this be considered an advantage for Ruth. Jenkinson replied that after a while it really doesn't matter how often a hitter faces a pitcher. Another point I made was the fact that during day games, which Ruth played exclusively, shadows can hinder the batter's view. Again Jenkinson said that while this may have been a disadvantage for Ruth, the impact would have been negligent.
I must say that his willingness to discuss these issues (and others) with a reader of his fine book only makes his work more appreciated. I am looking forward to his next book.
A Wonderful Look at the Sultan of Swat.......2007-06-08
Thnak for this thoughtful, insightful and persuasive presentation regarding the the career of Babe Ruth. While I consider myself a baseball fan, prior to reading this book, I would consider myself largely ignorant of Ruth's amazing career. After reading this book, I am blown away by Ruth's accomplishments as well as his place in comparison with the modern players. I highly recommend this book and look forward to your next book.
Eric Blank
The Success of Robert Fitzgibbons
Best Book to date on MY GRANDFATHER.......2007-05-11
Bill Jenkinson's book, "The Year Babe Ruth Hit 104 Home Runs"! It is the Babe Ruth book that I have been waiting for years to be written!! Bill has 28 years of researching my grandfather under his belt for writing this book. He can back everything up with published facts and asks anyone to challenge him! It answers alot of questions that I am asked about my grandfather. For example, his TRUE hitting ability, if he had the luxury of today's traveling from game to game, the new equipment, how much would he earn today, difference in how he was treated by the press, sports medicine of the time...etc. He backs it all up with fact too! It reads beautifully, and takes this man, this incrediable talent and blows your mind with what you don't know about the Sultan of Swat! It is really not an expensive book either! I HIGHLY reccommend this book for everyone! This is the REAL Babe in action!
Book Description
He was the Sultan of Swat. The Caliph of Clout. The Wizard of Whack. The Bambino. And simply, to his teammates, the Big Bam. From the award-winning author of the New York Times bestseller Ted Williams comes the thoroughly original, definitively ambitious, and exhilaratingly colorful biography of the largest legend ever to loom in baseball—and in the history of organized sports.
“[Montville is] one of America’s best sportswriters.” —Chicago Tribune
Babe Ruth was more than baseball’s original superstar. For eighty-five years, he has remained the sport’s reigning titan. He has been named Athlete of the Century . . . more than once. But who was this large, loud, enigmatic man? Why is so little known about his childhood, his private life, and his inner thoughts? In The Big Bam, Leigh Montville, whose recent New York Times bestselling biography of Ted Williams garnered glowing reviews and offered an exceptionally intimate look at Williams’s life, brings his trademark touch to this groundbreaking, revelatory portrait of the Babe.
Based on newly discovered documents and interviews—including pages from Ruth’s personal scrapbooks —The Big Bam traces Ruth’s life from his bleak childhood in Baltimore to his brash entrance into professional baseball, from Boston to New York and into the record books as the world’s most explosive slugger and cultural luminary. Montville explores every aspect of the man, paying particular attention to the myths that have always surrounded him. Did he really hit the “called shot” homer in the 1932 World Series? Were his home runs really “the farthest balls ever hit” in countless ballparks around the country? Was he really part black—making him the first African American professional baseball superstar? And was Ruth the high-octane, womanizing, heavy-drinking “fatso” of legend . . . or just a boyish, rudderless quasi-orphan who did, in fact, take his training and personal conditioning quite seriously?
At a time when modern baseball is grappling with hyper-inflated salaries, free agency, and assorted controversies, The Big Bam brings back the pure glory days of the game. Leigh Montville operates at the peak of his abilities, exploring Babe Ruth in a way that intimately, and poignantly, illuminates a most remarkable figure.
Customer Reviews:
Grand Slam Baseball Bio.......2007-09-07
The main difference between this book and last year's biography of Lou Gehrig (Luckiest Man) is that "Big Bam" is an entertaining look at one of the most entertaining figures in sports history, while 'Luckiest Man' is an informative look at one of the least entertaining sports figures from history.
Both books are good, but this book is FUN! It captures the era of Ruth, and details his amazing career in an entertaining Sea Biscuit like way.
Highly, highly, highly, recommended.
Good Bio of the Sultan of Swat.......2007-09-03
This is a riveting biography of the life of Babe Ruth, the Sultan of Swat, the Big Bam (one nom de guerre that I had never heard before). The author uses notes from a series of researchers, a number of whom wrote their own biographies of Babe Ruth. Hence, he appears to have a rich vein of material from which to mine nuggets on the life of Babe Ruth.
The focus of the book (page 5): "This book is an attempt to tell the story again for the Sports Center generation. . . . The approach is not so much to tear down the myths that grew around George Herman Ruth as to explain how and why they developed in the time in which he lived."
One metaphor used throughout the volume is "fog," representing those portions of Ruth's life where there is simply little information available. Much of his early childhood is enveloped in the fog. The story of how he moved from "St. Mary's Industrial School for Orphans, Delinquent, Incorrigible, and Wayward Boys to the Baltimore Orioles emerges from the fog and makes for good reading.
The book traces Ruth's rise from such humble and inauspicious beginnings to the minor leagues to the Boston Red Sox, where he became a great pitcher and promising hitter, to his purchase by the New York Yankees. The chapters recording his career speak of high points--and low points--and the awesome statistics that he compiled. More interesting, though, is the depiction of his very flawed life.
He may have had ADHD, if Montville is correct, but that is of no great moment. The point is that he had a hard time disciplining himself. Only after a wretched year and an as yet to be diagnosed malady that cost him a whole year did he begin to take care of himself.
The book does a nice job of recalling his career, his run in with his managers, his up and down relationships with teammates (the retelling of his ties to Lou Gehrig are quite interesting), his off field excesses (whether with food, drink, or women), his almost childlike behavior (the authors equated him to a 15 year old boy), his running through his salary. It also tells the tale of his attempting to take control of his life (with his second wide playing a key role, although their time together was hardly idyllic). The book concludes with Ruth's almost pathetic effort to become a manager while major league owners used and abused him in the process.
A nice biography indeed. Montville sometimes appears to venture into terra incognita where the evidentiary bases of his reflections are open to question (e.g., the ADHD diagnosis). But his is a candid biography, showing Ruth off--warts and accomplishments alike.
Well Written.......2007-09-02
Many of the reviewers here don't have the intelligence to realize that Montville used the 'fog' and question marks to indicate that a lot of Ruth's early life is unknown and lost to history.
So be it.
Montville has done a terrific job. Ruth was a great player. His shortcoming, like that of present day fielder, Johnny Damon, was not being smart enough to stay with the World Champion BOSTON RED SOX.
Also by Leigh Montville, and also essential reading, "Ted Williams, The Biography of An American Hero." Ted Williams was, of course, the Greatest Hitter Who Ever Lived.
The Big Bam Makes My Team.......2007-04-12
Author Leigh Montville's goal in the "The Big Bam" (one of the Babe's more obscure nicknames) is to portray the hidden Babe Ruth. In fact, trying to see through the fog of his life to get at the truth of his origins and life is a constant theme. For such a visible character in American history, there are huge gaps of understanding of aspects of Ruth such as his parents, childhood, first marriage, and illnesses. Montville has a tough act to follow because Robert Creamer wrote the definitive Ruth biography back in the seventies. The question in my mind was if it would be worth the time to read a new version. The answer is "Yes" because Montville does offer new insights on Ruth's life and what made him tick as we learn about a boy of seemingly limited prospects who turned out to have an innate athleticism that could blossom in the modern world with its widening entertainment and media establishment to become one of America's icons.
The subtitle of the book is the "Life and Times" of Babe Ruth and the reader does get an excellent view of the Babe in the context of the times and his wild ride through fame. Besides his life as a major league ballplayer, there is a lot of interesting information such as Ruth's off season activities, post-season barnstorming tours, speculation that he had a disorder such as ADD, the marketing of a superstar in his era, foreign travel, and of course, women and more women. Ruth's post-player life was very disappointing (as is the case with many athletes) as he tried to find a place for himself in the world. His post-career life was by no means pathetic, but his best days were obviously behind him. Most galling to him was that no major league team would fulfill his ambition to become a Manager and the book winds down with the anti-climactic last years of his life that ended in cancer at the age of fifty-three. For a reader's first biography of Babe Ruth I recommend Creamer's book, but "The Big Bam" is an excellent choice for a second look.
The Babe.......2007-04-10
This biography of Babe Ruth is a welcome addition to the plethora of literature written about him. All baseball fans should check this out.
Customer Reviews:
story was weak.......2005-05-11
I tend to agree with reviewer, Margaret Ogilvie, about this book. I was interested in learning more about style icon, Babe Paley, and her family and although the author did tell the interesting story of her upbringing (father was famous brain surgeon, Henry Cushing) and subsequent marriages of the 3 sisters, I found the story lacked substance. I didn't really feel I left the book knowing anything more about Babe Paley or her sisters. I learned, for instance, that Betsy married to FDR's son and they had a troubled marriage but it (Grafton's story) seemed like distant heresay. I've read great biographies and this was not one - I felt I was, as Margaret Ogilvie said, reading a compilation of newsclippings. I read through this book, unimpressed and rather disappointed. I'm hoping there are other books available about the Cushing sisters, specifically Babe Paley.
A Fascinating Family.......2003-08-19
The Cushing Sisters were an intriguing trio, by now largely forgotten except for their nearest and dearest. Groundbreaking neurosurgeon Harvey Cushing of Boston had three beautiful daughters born at the cusp of the 20th Century, but it was his wife who raised their girls with the single goal of making good marriages.
Daughter Betsey grew up to wed James Roosevelt, son of then-President Franklin Roosevelt, until she divorced him for the far-richer John (Jock) Hay Whitney.
Minnie married fabulously wealthy Vincent Astor, but not for long. Vincent subsequently married Brooke Astor, the sole survivor of this group of siblings and spouses and ex-spouses; Brooke has devoted her life to using Vincent's money for good works. And Minnie's second husband was...gasp!...not rich.
The beautiful Barbara, known as "Babe," first married socialite Stanley Mortimer, then divorced him and married the much richer founder of CBS Television, Bill Paley. Along the line, Babe became a fashion icon, the tastemaker of her generation.
These three women gave shape to the Jet Set of the 1950's and 1960's. In writing THE SISTERS, author David Grafton sheds light on a fascinating family and, in the process, Grafton also provides a snapshot of a fascinating moment in social history.
An era no longer . . ........2001-07-20
....Granted, not a great book - but a very good one. To me - this is a fasinating look at an era that exists no longer. These women led extremely interesting lives - not only in the people they married - but the way in which they chose to live them. Try and get a copy of this book - you won't regret it. It is one of my favorites.
A great topic - too bad another author didn't tackle it!.......2000-06-16
The only good thing about this book is that it has no grammatical errors or typos. This is the shallowist of biographies, probably gleaned from newspaper clippings. There are lists of who wore what at each sister's wedding as well as who attended and, later, lists of who was left exactly which items when the sisters died. In between is a vast nothingness, punctuated only with the barest details of the sisters' lives. We never do find out what they themselves are like - surely the whole point of a biography.
Average customer rating:
- babe ruth
- Lyrical pictures of the Babe hitting a home run
- For the child who loves baseball and has two left feet.
- A book that lives in the moment
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Home Run: The Story of Babe Ruth
Robert Burleigh
Manufacturer: Voyager Books
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ASIN: 0152045996 |
Amazon.com
"He has always had this swing. This easy, upthrusting swing. This 'pretty' swing, not taught by any coach. One day the Babe just swung--and it was there. It was his." Combining stirring, poetic prose and Mike Wimmer's realistic illustrations, Home Run conveys the feeling of excitement and awe that must have been present at a baseball game in which the great Babe Ruth played. Robert Burleigh, who previously collaborated with Wimmer on the award-winning Flight: The Journey of Charles Lindbergh, writes this picture-book tribute "for my Father--who loved the game ... for my son, Eli, to help him learn the spirit of can-do." His great love for both shines through. Our stomachs knot and spirits soar as Ruth steps up to the plate. Home Run softly draws us into the story, and the illustrations, rendered in oil on canvas, have an expansiveness and glow that lift them from the page. The gentle tribute is enhanced by "vintage-style baseball cards" that highlight aspects of Babe Ruth's career ("The Bambino loved driving low-slung convertibles, donning silk shirts and coonskin coats, and downing huge meals"), allowing Burleigh the opportunity to include important information without destroying the perfect simplicity of the main story. A treasure for anyone with a love of the game, Home Run is also powerfully affecting for those new to the excitement it holds. (Click to see a sample spread. Illustration from Home Run by Robert Burleigh, illustration © 1998 by Mike Wimmer, reproduced by permission of Harcourt Brace & Company.) (Ages 5 and older) --Aimee Damman
Book Description
The man who made the game of baseball, George Herman Ruth, wasn't always the Babe. Once he was a boy playing ball on a dirt lot.
Robert Burleigh and Mike Winner have created a stunning portrait of a legend--and of baseball's glory days.
Customer Reviews:
babe ruth .......2007-07-21
This is a beautiful picture book but it is for much younger children than whom i purchased it for. He is Ten and would have read it in fifteen min. not what i expected.
Lyrical pictures of the Babe hitting a home run.......2002-04-11
When I first saw the cover painting by Mike Wimmer on "Home Run" I was not sure if it was supposed to be Babe Ruth. In his glory days the Bambino had a body like an inverted pyramid, with those broad shoulders tapering down to those thin little ankles and tiny feet, and there are some paintings in "Home Run: The Story of Babe Ruth" that do not especially look like the Babe. However, those are few and far between.
The text by Robert Burleigh comes in two parts. First, there is the book's narrative, a sort of lyric ode to the Babe that combines his discovering his "pretty" swing as a boy with a home run he hits off of a Red Sox pitcher years later. Second, under the narrative text there is the back of a faux-baseball card (from "The World Champion" series), that has biographical and statistical details about Ruth.
However, the centerpiece of this book is the time at bat that takes up the last half of the book. Earlier there is a striking painting of Ruth launching a pop-up; the view is from behind the catcher who has taken off his mask, all eyes turned to the sky and the small white ball rising into the sky. Wimmer offers several unique and compelling perspectives during the home run episode as well: the Red Sox first baseman craning his neck to follow the flight of the unseen ball, the eyes of Ruth watching it disappear into the stands, the Babe's foot on first base as the pitcher stands dejectedly on the mound.
There is a quote on the back-flap of the dust-jacket that says the "Chicago Sun-Times" described Wimmer's illustrations as "reminiscent of some of Normal Rockwell's best." Certainly there are strong similarities, especially in the painting of the fans reacting to Ruth's homerun. But with his emphasis on key details to tell the story Wimmer offers a decidedly different perspective from Rockwell that I really liked. Ultimately, it is the artwork rather than the narrative that makes this a lyrical book.
For the child who loves baseball and has two left feet........2001-08-23
Purchased this for my nephew who is overweight, uncoordinated and loves playing baseball. Reading this to him increased his joy of the game and gave him confidence to keep trying to improve his own skills. Taught him to do best with the skills he had right now and even how to deal with successes in life. This level of understanding was terrific for children and adult alike. Excellent book for sharing special time with children.
A book that lives in the moment.......1999-07-14
This books opens with the Great Bambino as a child. Remindingyou of your own innocent childhood. It then leaps to his professinalcareer where it slows down to one at bat. (the moment) It is written with a grace for detail that makes you feel like part of the story. You hear the crack of the bat, feel the dirt under your spikes, the "soft hardness of the base", and hear the defening sound of the crowd. This book brings tears to my eyes everytime I read it to my daughter and my son. Maybe one day they will read it to their children and know why. END
Book Description
Novice knitters only need to know a few stitches to make a collection of dolls with personality and wardrobes to match. To begin, the practical knitting and sewing know-how section illustrates the simple garter and stockinette stitches used to assemble the dolls. Supplies are minimal and easy to obtain—just yarn and thread, sewing and knitting needles, and some small pieces of fabric for the clothes and accessories. One each of five sections is devoted to creating each doll's identity and accoutrements. Included are sewing templates to cut out and use, knitting charts, and advice on washing and caring for these dolls. This skill-building project book is a start-to-finish playmate maker that will inspire creativity and spark the imagination.
Customer Reviews:
Starlet Babes.......2007-08-12
The pleasure is all yours! Published September, 2005 Knitted Babes: Five Dolls & Their Wardrobes to Knit & Stitch by Claire Garland is an invitation to a modish doll party. Bring your eccentric yarns and retro fabric scraps. This is the place for orange and pink marshmallow creations. Knit up the Babes then outfit them as you choose -- surfer girl or glitzy diva, whoever takes your fancy. Make a Babe, and you'll want more. Here are my variations for fervent fingers:
The Babes: Dot Pebbles surf chick; Flo Tilly delicate dancer; DD Diva in desirable Deco; Rudy Ranch red-haired Western wild country girl; Bunny Bright café bar star.
1. The arms and legs can be worked in i-cord, though the original knitted strips are softer if your doll is to be love-squashed by a little one. Finish the i-cord with four rows of straight stocking stitch to enable flat stitching to body shape.
2. Experienced knitters may prefer to knit the body/head piece in the round. Cast on with waste yarn (or crochet a scrap chain a few more chains than required, then knit up stitches into back bumps of chain. Release chain later when sliding stitches onto needle for cast off.). When doll is completed, leave final stitches for head on a yarn holder, turn inside out, working a 3-needle cast (bind) off across base. Pull through to right side. Stuff doll through small head opening and finish ends.
3. The book instructions are for 4ply yarn, but that's only the beginning. Dye natural wool with plant dyes. Perhaps use handspun or tweed wool; or since only a 50g ball is required, use a luxury fibre (silk, alpaca, cashmere) for a chic Babe.
4. After making a few Retro Babes, you might want to add to your collection with Vintage Babes. Style her wardrobe, adding highlights of violet, pearl, mauve, rosebud, pansy and spring greens. Freshwater pearls (where jewellery packs are sold) make sweet necklaces strung on a length of crochet perle cotton. Cocktail hats can be fashioned from felt, netting, feathers, beads and miniature silk flowers. Sift through broken brooches, bracelets, earrings and necklaces for deft jewels and metal filigree.
5. The clothing patterns given in the book are knitted or sewn. Imagine designing crochet creations for her as well. Begin with an evening shawl or textured blanket for Ruby cowgirl. Diva Babe will thank you for snips of pure silk satin, cotton net and silk georgette.
6. Observe safety rules if the doll is a gift for a small child. If this is your Babe... try out jewellery-making on a manageable scale or accentuate clothing and hats with glass beads. Excite yourself with a new craft, letting Babe model your embroidery, cross-stitch or millinery techniques. Fabric shops are stocking up on retro and vintage prints. Dive in!
Buy the book and have some fun! Vibrant photos, comprehensible instructions and bright knitting charts for fair-isle colourwork. No confusion here. Anyone can create a starlet Babe. (Yes, the neck is floppy, but she is a saucy cuddle and bedtime friend).
The Babes are the best!.......2007-04-18
When this book arrived, all other projects were pushed aside! the instuctions and patterns are easy to understand and the knitted clothing patterns are a good introduction to constructing people sized garments. The reason I gave the book four instead of five stars is the gauge issue mentioned by several others. I am not quite sure if this is due to the fact I am a very tight knitter or the book. It wasn't that huge an issue, I will use this book alot and I'm sure you will too.
So cute - but beware!.......2006-09-07
I love this book, I have been working very hard putting things together for my two little girls, BUT a lot of the instructions haven't worked for me. I have had to improvise a lot. After my girls play with them all the stuffing goes up to their head and down to their bodies, leaving the neck completely floppy, and from reading other reviews I should have checked my gauge, because following the instructions as written everything has come out too small.
After all that, I have to say my girls love the dolls and it was a blast making them.
Love the book but..........2006-07-24
I was very excited when I saw this book as I wanted to make birthday presents for my friend's girls. I tried to match the gauge to make the doll and had to go up to size five needles even though I was using fingering weight yarn. The first outfit I made was the tutu. I matched the guage and still ended up with an outfit that was far too small.
Just beware of of yarn recommendations and needle sizes!
Worth Every Penny!.......2006-06-25
Just received this book and what a super value!So many cute dolls, clothes and shoes to make and super easy, well illustrated format.Even has knitting, sewing and crochet instructions, so the novice can tackle any project.So far all patterns work up great and possibilities are endless!.Great job Claire Garland!
Book Description
"I swing big, with everything I've got. I hit big or I miss big. I like to live as big as I can." -- Babe Ruth
Babe Ruth is without a doubt the most famous character ever produced by the sport of baseball. A legendary player, world-famous for his hitting prowess, he transcended the sport to enter the mainstream of American life as an authentic folk hero.
In this extraordinary biography, noted sportswriter Robert W. Creamer reveals the complex man behind the sports legend. From Ruth's early days in a Baltimore orphanage, to the glory days with the Yankees, to his later years, Creamer has drawn a classic portrait of an American original.
Customer Reviews:
Writing by a true fan of the greatest game.......2007-01-01
Legends transcend time. The Stories get better, the adjectives get bolder, until they become passé. Ruth was the only athlete who was already at legend at age 21. There was no reason to exaggerate, and no words to describe his ferocious dominance. And the timing of his nuclear assault on history couldn't have been better planned. Fresh from the Black Sox crisis of 1919, America's greatest sport teetered on extinction. To this day, this baby faced Neanderthal had more athletic dominance over his peers than anyone in history...and more charisma than ten W.C. Fields. He changed the sport. Some say he changed the world.
Home Runs were non-existent before him. Baseball runs were earned one base at a time; singles...sacrifice bunts...a sport of hard drinking pitchers, and gritty base stealers led by Cobb. After Ruth arrived, the physical dimensions had to be rearranged just to accommodate his abilities. Mammoth stadiums were built with double the capacity, replete with awe inspiring 450+ ft fences. All because of Ruth. But the parks were no match for him. He was the all-time home run champion at age 25, HR champ 13 times in 15 years, and in his 17 years as a hitter, he hit 235 home runs 450 ft. or further. By comparision, Bonds was HR champ just twice, and hit just 3, count em, 3 450ft HRs his first 15 seasons pre-roids.
I've just read the new Ruth book out called The Big Bam, but afficionado's like me still choose Beamer's documentary as the voice of record. Unlike the rest, he best captures Ruth's massive power and abilities, childhood innocence, great sense of humor and rebelliousness, and rock star image. Ruth was the real deal. He was a true legend in his own time, and wore the badge humbly on his sleeve. He lit up every room he entered, and lit up every pitcher he faced. This book is a classic, like the man himself.
Glory Of His Time.......2006-11-27
Some personalities are too big to be contained in a single book, especially one who exemplified bigness like Babe Ruth.
Ruth was not much into analyzing the whys of his greatness. As retold in Robert Creamer's 1974 biography, when asked the secret of why he hit so many home runs, he replied: "Just swinging." Asked about "the psychology of the home run" by the same reporter, Babe responded: "Say, are you kidding me?"
Creamer seems to feel the same way. He's not the prose version of Jack Webb exactly, but his "Babe" is heavy on facts and remarkably light on the sort of thing modern sports writers like to fill their weighty tomes up with, cultural impact and inner-self profiling. Creamer presents teasing glimpses of Babe's revelries, and some hints of who he really was beneath the legend (one close friend says "I don't think he really loved anybody"). But his focus is on Babe the baseball player, his statistical brilliance and his awesome, game-breaking power.
He broke into the majors as a pitcher, developing into "the best lefthander in the game" before it became clear, in this blessed time before the advent of the designated hitter, that he could do more to win games with his bat than his arm. What followed transformed baseball from a slightly noisier and faster version of cricket into the National Pastime. Babe Ruth didn't invent the home run, but he might as well have deserved the copyright, hitting 54 homers in 1920, more than any other entire team produced except for his Yankees, red-haired stepchildren to the fabled New York Giants until Babe arrived and changed everything.
Even though his career home-run record was in the process of being broken when "Babe" was published, Ruth was about so much more than that. Creamer gets at a lot of the on-field stuff, especially, like the fact he once led the American League in batting average and, as a pitcher, produced the longest stretch of earned-run-free innings for more than 40 years.
The book does come across as dry at points, though, focusing on Ruth's more measurable accomplishments and ignoring the less tangible stuff. Creamer doesn't overwhelm you with a lot of flowing prose, which is a good thing, but he leaves a lot of things alone that seem fertile ground for exploration. Possibly because the last bio I read was Robert Caro's "Path To Power," it felt like Creamer was light on sourcing, but that's probably because his method of research was a lot less formal, chats at the bar with old-timers over the course of decades condensed into the iceberg we get here.
What Creamer wrote, he got right, though, something I know as a fact. My grandfather covered the Yankees and was Babe's favorite ghostwriter, and my father, who saw Babe in the Yankee clubhouse, swore by Creamer as one of sportwriting's best for giving the honest, unvarnished truth. It's not a book for boys, as Creamer notes, but "Babe" will make you feel like one reading about this real-life giant who walked the earth.
This is not the Tom Meany biography of my youth........2006-07-25
That was written for boys & swallowed every legend whole. Robert Creamer has written quite a bit on baseball. This may be about the best biography of its time. You can't do much better than Tom Parker if you take the audio route. I've read or listened to other works by Mr. Creamer & they are consistently good. That said he has alway seemed a bit to attached to the numbers. Baseball is the most satistical of sports & I do enjoy them. Ever year there is a new on that can be applied however unofficially to players of other eras such as the Babe. One of the newest ones now in vogue is the quality start.
Six inningss minimum with three earned runs or less is a quality start. Having said that sometimes the numbers overwhelm the story. Stats on the Babe's minor league years will be forgotten about 2 seonds after you hear them. Mr Creamer endeavors to be accurate & may knock down some of the legends, or reduce them to believable proportions. The belly-ache heard round the world & The Babe hitting three home-runs in his last game are examples of the hype at the time. Creamer gets real & lifts, in the end his biography to a more adult level. I think Mr. Creamer dwells a bit more on Babe's other appetites, as well, such as women. His various ailments, injuries & suspensions have surprisingly depressed records that could have been even greater than they eventually were. Babe's juvenile behavior in his early years & the number of people in the baseball world that he irritated by his sometimes arrogant attitude through-out his career thwarted him in the thing he wanted most: to be a big league manager. That is sad & we'd have a lot more to talk about since he lived for another 10 years after he left baseball. He died relatively young but he was & still is (despite his numbers being slowly
eclipsed) the greatest. If you wanted a truthful biography this is is a pretty good one & its available in the audio version.
The Best About The Best.......2006-03-19
Although I am only 27 years old I consider myself a baseball purist(as well as a huge Dodger Fan). I have a big attraction to the greats and the detail of the book is incredible! I was Rivitted and a Must read for ANY Baseball fan.
The Legend Truly Does Come to Life.......2006-02-28
One of the finest sports books I have ever read...great as a sports book, even greater as a biography....probably better as a biography....the characters, especially the Babe, come alive. It's as if you are living history as it happens and the characters are real, so, so real. Gives the reader an understanding and appreciation of the men who played the game as never before. Simple, yet complex men, in a simpler time. Simple to us, but still complex and uncertain to them....A rare find. A rare book. A good, good book. Highly recommended to the devout baseball fan, the casual baseball fan and to the reader who has a casual, passing interest in Babe Ruth, his life and times. Highly recommended.
Book Description
A smart, funny, insightful peek into modern China through the eyes of a "foreign babe." "For a real insider's look at life in modern China, readers should turn to Rachel DeWoskin."Sophie Beach, The Economist
Determined to broaden her cultural horizons and live a "fiery" life, twenty-one-year-old Rachel DeWoskin hops on a plane to Beijing to work for an American PR firm based in the busy capital. Before she knows it, she is not just exploring Chinese culture but also creating it as the sexy, aggressive, fearless Jiexi, the starring femme fatale in a wildly successful Chinese soap opera.
Experiencing the cultural clashes in real life while performing a fictional version onscreen, DeWoskin forms a group of friends with whom she witnesses the vast changes sweeping through China as the country pursues the new maxim, "to get rich is glorious." In only a few years, China's capital is transformed. With "considerable cultural and linguistic resources" (The New Yorker), DeWoskin captures Beijing at this pivotal juncture in her "intelligent, funny memoir" (People), and "readers will feel lucky to have sharp-eyed, yet sisterly, DeWoskin sitting in the driver's seat"(Elle). Reading group guide included.
Customer Reviews:
overall good ride, watch out for potholes.......2007-07-08
First off, cons: this book does not have a story arc because it is a memoir, so the end is a little anticlimactic (sp?). Also, not to give any plot away but there are some parts where you may find yourself not liking the narrator or wishing she didn't do/say X/Y. Some people may find this book a little gimicky or overly self-promoting.
The pros: a thoughtful account of one person's experience in China. I say one person because this is definitely not The Definitive China. For different takes see River Town: Two Years on the Yangtze (P.S.), Iron and Silk, and The Early Arrival of Dreams: A Year in China among others. River Town especially though.
This book, though, is a little on the lighter side. Entertaining and not nearly as sordid as the cover would have you believe. The first time I read this book on the recommendation of a professor, before I went to China to study for 6 months. Coming back, it was assigned by the same professor for a class. We especially discussed the term "nuance paralysis" that she has coined to explain the movie-star like feeling life has when one lives in a foreign country whose language and culture one does not entirely understand. It actually was really well suited to an academic discussion of how one approaches life/travel in a foreign country. Overall highly recommended, along with a grain of salt.
First-person cultural perspective of China.......2007-04-30
This was a unique introduction to Chinese culture that I have been looking for given an upcoming trip in 2008. There are numerous books on how the economy, businesses, politics, etc. of China have changed and how they have affected the world around them. However, this perspective rings true because you come to the realization that world governments represent the interests of their people yet rarely do they give an accurate portrayal in what those people are like. You get a sense of how far China has come and yet how far it still has to go. This may sound incredibly condescending but on the flip side, the outside world has come a long way in understanding China yet still has a long way to go. It was also great to learn a few Mandarin phrases in pinyin which you practice saying to yourself while reading. It is a refreshing departure from more supposedly scholarly books about China.
Great for ex-laowai
.......2007-01-12
I loved this book! But, like some of the other readers with positive reviews, I went into it slightly biased. Her descriptions of a expats life in Beijing are dead on and really reminded me of when I was in China. I found the things she went through, people she talked to, Chinese words she used, and feelings she had very amusingly familiar and had a hard time putting this book down.
That being said, I'm not sure if someone who hasn't spent time in Beijing (or China) would really appreciate this book.
Foreign Babes in Beijing:Behind the Scenes of a new China.......2006-11-10
Rachel DeWoskin's move to Beijing was brave and adventurous; but she did not tell the story of her escapades well enough to engage me with any element of her memoir. The sexual trysts were less than reviting, and the book was promoted as akin to "Sex in the City". Hardly. The front cover was far more titillating than the pages following. I completed the book due to my"once started, must finish a book rule"; and it was a book club selection. Rachel's writing style didn't capture the elements that might have made it a great read. It should have been a sophisticated story; however, the writing style didn't catch it. Sorry!
This is the worst piece of trash- do not waste your money.......2006-04-23
I really had to laugh reading the other lengthy online "reviews" about this book. I have doubts the other reviewers even read the whole book (it sounds like they read the dust jackets).I have a feeling this book was published only becuase there are so few "armchair" travel books or modern memoirs of China that it's lack of quality is overcome by the fact there is no competition.
Ms. De Woskin writes this self-indulgent book with a "gee-whiz" look how lucky-I-am self promotion that comes out clearly in the text. The entire book is disingenous- as if we are all to belive that cunning and shrewdness are not involved in landing a starring role in a tv series and her quick ascent in a foreign corporations corporate ladder. And her idiotic lacing of factoids on Chinese history reads like an seventh graders poor essay "On China".
What is utterly galling is her revelation that due to so-called "prior travel arrangements" she could not stay in China for the funeral of one of her best friends whom she was with on the night of his death and then exploits his story for her book-suggesting he had "shady" business dealings and sordidly tattle-telling his sex life.Give me a break, Rachel, lots of people have lived abroad, if you were shrewd enough to achieve everthything else you certainly could have managed a phone call to the airlines for something so important. But no better to exploit the story than actually have to be a real human being.Your parents should be ashamed and your readers along with them.
Incredibly enough the author tells us her childhood was spent visiting China. How ridiculous is this claim when every one of her experiences with the Chinese quotodienne (sp?) is simply a rehash comparison of "it's not like this in America". One would think at least one prior trip to the country would have elevated the discourse.
This book is a WASTE Of time and money from a ridiculous, immoral human being. It would have been more aptly titled "How I did a Chinese guy and the crickets taste like chicken : a memoir from an overly self-involved, overeducated jerk.
Do not buy this book if you want travel info get National Georgrapgic travel book on China and read up Pearl S. Buck.
Average customer rating:
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Into the Mouths of Babes: An Anthology of Children's Abolitionist Literature
Deborah C. De Rosa
Manufacturer: Praeger Publishers
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Braun IRT 4020 ThermoScan Ear Thermometer
ASIN: 0275979512 |
Book Description
While most people know that Harriet Beecher Stowe's famous book Uncle Tom's Cabin spurred on abolitionist sentiments in the North, not many are aware of the fast abolitionist literature of children's books, poems, short stories, and essays. Many of these volumes were written by domestic women, not seasoned authors, and have been lost to the ages. Here, De Rosa recovers a collection of these writings, illustrating the domestic abolitionists' efforts when cultural imperatives demanded women's silence. These women asserted their anti-slavery sentiments through the voices of victims (slave children and mothers), white mother-historians, and abolitionist children in juvenile literature, one of the few genres available to female authors of the period. This collection restores the voices of these little known authors and shows how their voices helped to influence children and adults of the period. For women struggling to find a voice in the abolitionist movement while maintaining the codes of gender and respectability, writing children's literature was an acceptable strategy to counteract the opposition. By seizing the opportunity to write abolitionist juvenile literature, domestic abolitionists maintained their identities as exemplary mother-educators, preserved their claims to "femininity",and simultaneously entered the public arena. By adapting literary strategies popular in nineteenth-century juvenile narratives, domestic novels, and slave narratives to document slavery's violation of religious, economic, and political principles, these women "spoke out" against and institution that stood in marked contrast to the beliefs they held so dear. This anthology aims to fill the important gap in our understanding of women's literary productions about race and gender and illustrates the limitations of a canon that excludes such voices.
Amazon.com
He was a big man, and The Babe is a big book--a four-bag celebration of the Bambino, the greatest baseball legend of them all. Lawrence S. Ritter, author of The Glory of Their Times, the classic oral history of America's national pastime in the first decades of the 20th century, weaves together a workmanlike, often elegiac, narrative of Babe Ruth's life and career. But it is the all-star collection of photos--of the Babe in action, the Babe just hanging around being the Babe, and rare Ruth collectibles--that sends this volume where the Babe used to send high fastballs: out of the park. Hank Aaron, who sent a few out himself, pens a warm introduction to the idol whose career home-run record he ultimately surpassed.
Book Description
This is the lavish celebration of the life and times of the greatest baseball player who ever lived. Consisting of 350 photographs, The Babe recounts the classic rags-to-riches tale of Babe Ruth.
Customer Reviews:
The Babe would have been proud........1998-07-22
If you like baseball, you will love this book. It's a "coffee table" type book that every true baseball fan needs in his/her sports library.
It comes with a Homerun Derby CD. For me, the game was a little hard to figure out because the directions are a little unclear. I'm working on it and will master it one day.
Enjoyed the book. Easy reading with great photos.
Average customer rating:
- Strange--but interesting--little book
- Interesting but a little slow
- A pleasurable read- Getting to know Ty and the Babe more closely
- A Grand Slam!
- GREAT FOR BASEBALL -- AND GOLF -- FANS!
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Ty and The Babe: Baseball's Fiercest Rivals; A Surprising Friendship And The 1941 Has-Beens Golf Championship
Tom Stanton
Manufacturer: Thomas Dunne Books
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Opening Day: The Story of Jackie Robinson's First Season
ASIN: 0312361599
Release Date: 2007-05-15 |
Book Description
Early in the twentieth century, fate thrust a young Babe Ruth into the gleaming orbit of Ty Cobb. The resulting collision produced a dazzling explosion and a struggle of mythic magnitude. At stake was not just baseball dominance, but eternal glory and the very soul of a sport. For much of fourteen seasons, the Cobb-Ruth rivalry occupied both men and enthralled a generation of fans. Even their retirement from the ball diamond didn’t extinguish it.
On the cusp of America’s entry into World War II, a quarter century after they first met at Navin Field, Cobb and Ruth rekindled their long-simmering feud—this time on the golf course. Ty and Babe battled on the fairways of Long Island, New York; Newton, Massachusetts; and Grosse Ile, Michigan; in a series of charity matches that spawned national headlines and catapulted them once more into the spotlight.
Ty and The Babe is the story of their remarkable relationship. It is a tale of grand gestures and petty jealousies, superstition and egotism, spectacular feats and dirty tricks, mind games and athleticism, confrontations, conflagrations, good humor, growth, redemption, and, ultimately, friendship. Spanning several decades, Ty and The Babe conjures the rollicking cities of New York, Boston, and Detroit and the raucous world of baseball from 1915 to 1928, as it moved from the Deadball days of Cobb to the Lively Ball era of Ruth. It also visits the spring and summer of 1941, starting with the Masters Tournament at Augusta National, where Cobb formally challenged Ruth, and continuing with the golf showdown that saw both men employ secret weapons.
On these pages, author Tom Stanton challenges the stereotypes that have cast Cobb forever as a Satan and Ruth as a Santa Claus. Along the way, he brings to life a parade of memorable characters: Bobby Jones, Walter Hagen, Grantland Rice, Tris Speaker, Lou Gehrig, Will Rogers, Joe DiMaggio, a trick shot–shooting former fugitive, and a fifteen-year-old caddy with an impeccable golf lineage.
No other ball players dominated their time as formidably as Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth. Even today, many decades since either man walked this earth, they tower over the sport. Who was better? Who was the greatest? Those questions followed them throughout their baseball careers, into retirement, and onto the putting greens. That they linger yet is a testament to their talents and personalities.
Praise for the Writing of Tom Stanton:
“Ruth and Cobb come together as never before in this charming story of rivalry and friendship. Stanton, a keen storyteller, has written a book that surprises and delights.”
—Jonathan Eig, author of Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig
“The wardrobe mistress of baseball history seems to have assigned the white hat to Babe Ruth and the black hat to Ty Cobb for all time. The Babe, the legendary Sultan of Swat, has become the patron saint of the sport, flamboyant and loud, larger than life, hail fellow well met, a character who hit mammoth home runs and wiped the runny noses of neighborhood urchins. Cobb has become the villain, foul mouthed and cantankerous, unliked and unloved by even his teammates. . . . Now Tom Stanton comes along to rearrange the roles in his terrific new book, Ty and The Babe, which chronicles the relationship between the two baseball icons. He takes off the hats and tells us about the real people. And it all is great fun.”
—Leigh Montville, author of The Big Bam
“Wonderful! Ty and The Babe is rich, elegant, and powerful. Tom Stanton vividly brings back to life two rival sports icons in a rollicking tale filled with tension, humor, and warmth. It's fantastic.”
—Ernie Harwell, Hall of Fame broadcaster
“Frankly, Ty and The Babe had me hooked from the opening page, a thoroughly absorbing tale that has all the charm and elements of an unforgettable film—the two greatest players from baseball's Golden Era, blood feuds, dueling rivals, brawling fans, mythologizing sportswriters and the consequences of a rapidly changing game . . . all capped off by a poignant golf match between a pair of fading titans. Tom Stanton has beautifully re-created the most romantic period of American sports, provided new and powerful insights into a pair of greatly misunderstood figures in Cobb and Ruth, and given baseball and golf fans everywhere something to cheer lustily about.”
—James Dodson, author of Final Rounds and Ben Hogan: An American Life
Customer Reviews:
Strange--but interesting--little book.......2007-10-06
This is a strange little book. For one thing, it presents a far more positive picture of Ty Cobb than one often encounters. Second, golf becomes a key part of the relationship between two bitter antagonists--Babe Ruth and Ty Cobb.
Ty Cobb was an exemplar of the old fashioned "scientific" approach to baseball, bunts, stolen bases, sacrifices, etc. Babe Ruth was a harbinger of a new era--focusing on the home run.
Cobb versus Ruth, while they were in the major leagues together, had a pretty negative relationship. Cobb had little respect for Ruth; Ruth despised Cobb.
The book tells of their slowly evolving relationship, to the point where they expressed respect toward one another by the end of Cobb's career.
Their rivalry took a turn after their respective retirements. Both became avid golfers. They took part in a series of golf matches, where there was much greater camaraderie than when they played baseball.
The book chronicles that strange evolution in their relationship.
There is a nice appendix, which chronicles those games in which they opposed one another. Interesting. . . .
An offbeat little book that ends up humanizing Cobb.
Interesting but a little slow.......2007-08-25
This book was very interesting and informative and obviously well researched since the author is a baseball historian. It makes you feel as if you know the players and are living in their time period but it isn't the most enjoyable book I've ever read. You rarely smile or laugh, there's very little that's amusing even though these are two very colorfull and bigger than life characters so I felt the book could have been a little lighter. Also check out two of my favorites - The Teammates by David Halberstam and When Life Was Baseball Teams and Egg Creams by Craig Howard, the last one being much lighter and more about life in the time period than baseball itself. Good nostalgia though.
A pleasurable read- Getting to know Ty and the Babe more closely.......2007-08-15
I have now read all of Tom Stanton's books, and I have enjoyed them all. I am one of many that had certain perceptions of Ty Cobb's character based on stereoptypical opinion of Cobb in recent years. But Stanton sets the record straight in allowing us to get to know a different Ty Cobb; one who is a great competitor, but no where near the "evil" man that he has been portrayed as. The Babe is as fun loving as ever in this book and it is a fun read. I would recommend it to baseball fans, and golf fans too!
A Grand Slam!.......2007-07-30
Mr. Stanton's Ty and the Babe is well researched and a great read for any baseball fan interested in two of the sport's iconic figures. Of course I knew of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth before reading this book, but I didn't know too much about their background and playing days. Not only did I learn about Ty and Babe, I also became more familiar with the long ball era and how baseball changed during these years that the two historic figures competed.
Kevin Grammens
GREAT FOR BASEBALL -- AND GOLF -- FANS!.......2007-07-06
GREAT FOR BASEBALL -- AND GOLF -- FANS: Face it, not many people confess an equal love for both sports. I've always been a "baseball -- first, last and always" type fan. That's why Tom Stanton's TY AND THE BABE surprised me so much.
Imagine a slugger like Barry Bonds versus a pure hitter like Ichiro Suzuki about 30 years from now. Not on the diamond, but the golf course! Once-intense athletes and enigmatic personalities transferring their remaining skills, attitudes and philosophies to a new sport. That's what I imagined as I read Stanton's insightful recreation of a little-known momentous encounter between baseball legends more than 60 years ago. Yes, Stanton made me like golf. At least, this tournament had the same drama and charm of a Mid-Summer Classic. I suspect golf fans would be just as charmed by his accessible reports of Cobb's and Ruth's baseball years.
Other reviewers have rightfully praised Stanton's ability to look beyond the stereotyped depictions of both stars. Most importantly, the author hasn't penned a fawning love letter to either Hall of Famer. He depicts both Ruth and Cobb as fascinating but flawed PEOPLE.
A superb historical detective, Stanton has given new life to an overlooked chapter of American sports. I can't wait for his next work!
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