Foto do autor

Norman L. Macht

Autor(a) de Babe Ruth

32 Works 532 Membros 4 Reviews

Obras de Norman L. Macht

Babe Ruth (1991) 117 cópias
Ty Cobb (Baseball Legends) (1992) 59 cópias
Cy Young (Baseball Legions) (1992) 26 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1929-08-04
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Educação
University of Chicago (1947)
Ocupação
baseball executive

Membros

Resenhas

I must confess that I approached this book with more than my usual amount of curiosity. Connie Mack was certainly an important figure in the history of baseball — but a three-volume biography of his life? Did his life justify such attention? And why does it take three volumes to tell the story of it?

It turns out that the answer to the last question is pretty straightforward, as Macht writes not just an account of Mack's like and times, but a season-by-season chronicle of the Philadelphia A's. It's an understandable decision, given the importance of the team to Mack's life — he was both majority owner and manager of the club. And to Macht's credit, he never loses sight of the fact that his book is a biography of Mack and not a history of the team. But it does result in the book that one has to be a baseball fan to enjoy, which may be obvious given the subject but is nonetheless true to provide the perseverance necessary to wade through the details.

Macht's tale is a sad one of the decline and departure of a storied baseball club. The story picks up at the start of 1932, with the A's recovering from a close loss in the World Series to the St. Louis Cardinals. Though Macht regards the team as possibly the best in the history of baseball, Mack was soon forced to sell some of his top players due to the increasing financial strictures imposed by the Great Depression. With attendance declining dramatically, Mack had to cut costs and the only way he could was by reducing his payroll.

Despite his cutbacks, Mack still pined for another pennant, and he scoured the country looking for good players. Yet Macht notes that for all of Mack's knowledge about the game, he missed out of the future: the farm system. Slow to adopt it himself, Mack's teams had to struggle uphill against organizations with well-groomed players ready for the big leagues. Though Mack made halfhearted gestures to create a farm system by the end of the 1930s, throughout most of the decade his teams fought simply to post winning records. Though baseball recovered by the end of the decade, America's entry into World War II forced another four years of hobbled play. It was only after the war that the octogenarian Mack finally had his last opportunity to win a pennant, only to fall short in 1948.

Macht recounts all of this is a book heavily seasoned with anecdotes. They make for lively reading, conveying a time when professional baseball was a lot more haphazard and fun than it seems today. They also make this a book primarily written for baseball fans, something further underscored by Mack's frequent use of baseball slang, which is employed without explanation. It's a trivial barrier, though, for anyone who is interested in learning about the fascinating life of a baseball legend, one whose life spanned the establishment of "America's pastime."
… (mais)
 
Marcado
MacDad | Mar 27, 2020 |
Well, I guess it wasn't all THAT soon that I read this part two (read the first volume closing in on 5 years ago), but I got there eventually! Read this a chapter or so at a time in between other book I've been reading. Just as good as the first installment. The late 20s early 30s A's are my favorite non-yankee teams of all time.
½
 
Marcado
BooksForDinner | Mar 7, 2018 |
One of my favorite movies is "Pride of the Yankees." Through that movie and this book, I developed a deep respect for this man. Lou Gehrig is easily one of my heroes. He proved himself as a baseball great and became an all-American hero through his battle with ALS.
 
Marcado
mgeorge2755 | Aug 7, 2015 |
Very good. Macht assumes a lot and fills in the blanks a lot, but this isn't a history monograph. However, a great deal of real research went into this work, and the author bases the work on chiefly primary source materials like interviews and newspaper reports. His love of the subject is evident throughout. Though there is an (strong) argument to be made tat this could have been 100 (200?) pages shorter, I'll be reading part two soon.
 
Marcado
BooksForDinner | Dec 12, 2013 |

Prêmios

You May Also Like

Estatísticas

Obras
32
Membros
532
Popularidade
#46,804
Avaliação
3.9
Resenhas
4
ISBNs
57

Tabelas & Gráficos