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23+ Works 360 Membros 7 Reviews

About the Author

Ira Berkow has been a sports columnist and feature writer for the New York Times for more than twenty years.

Obras de Ira Berkow

Associated Works

The Best American Sports Writing of the Century (1999) — Contribuinte — 191 cópias
How to Talk Jewish (1990) 72 cópias
Jewish Jocks: An Unorthodox Hall of Fame (2012) — Contribuinte — 54 cópias
Carew (1979) 30 cópias

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Conhecimento Comum

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Resenhas

This is a fascinating, well-written book biography. Lou Brissie's story is quite something. A teenage pitching phenom in his native South Carolina in the late 1930s, Brissie interrupted his promising baseball career to enlist in the Army after Pearl Harbor. When he went off to war, he already had a commitment from Connie Mack, the longtime owner/manager of the Philadelphia A's. Mack was going to sign Brissie and then pay for him to go to college for three years, an arrangement that provides an idea of how much potential Brissie was seen to have.

But Brissie's leg was shattered during an artillery attack in Italy in 1944 and he had to beg the doctors not to amputate. Luckily for Brissie, he found one Army doctor willing to try to save the leg. Brissie went through multiple operations--his leg bone was essentially fused together from the fragments the exploding artillery shell had left behind--and he had to wear a cumbersome brace to walk, let along pitch in the major leagues. And yet pitch in the major leagues, he did, and quite effectively, despite that leg brace and the essentially constant pain he endured. In fact, Brissie was extremely well known during the post-war years as an inspiration for wounded veterans and kids with handicaps. It's surprising and more than a bit sad that his story has been largely forgotten.

Brissie was comfortable around blacks and happy to be teammates with black ballplayers, not something to be taken for granted in those early days of the integration of Major League Baseball, especially given Brissie's Southern upbringing. During the Depression, Brissie's father, a former daredevil motorcycle rider, had had a cycle repair shop in their small South Carolina town and had a black friend as a full business partner. For this sin, one night the Klan pulled Brissie's father out of their home and beat him severely in their front yard in front of the family, breaking two ribs, then lit a cross ablaze in front of the house. The lessons Brissie took from this was admiration for his father's courage and a hatred of racism.

Brissie was still alive when Berkow was working on the book (the book was published in 2009 and Brissie died in 2013) and sat for extensive interviewing. He comes across as an extremely thoughtful fellow. Berkow, a Pulitzer Prize winning jouralist, is a fine writer who clearly had a strong connection to his subject for this biography. I highly recommend this book for readers with an interest in American history and with even a passing interest in baseball.
… (mais)
1 vote
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rocketjk | 1 outra resenha | Aug 4, 2021 |
Good subject, good writer, good book
 
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jamespurcell | 1 outra resenha | Aug 12, 2020 |
 
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lulaa | Mar 20, 2019 |
Colorful collection of accounts, mostly personal interviews with people who lived and/or worked in the once-vibrant Maxwell Street area in Chicago. I liked that Berkow mostly lets his subjects talk, allowing their personalities to come through unfiltered, and one still gets a real sense of the place from their reminiscences.
 
Marcado
simchaboston | 1 outra resenha | Nov 15, 2013 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
23
Also by
5
Membros
360
Popularidade
#66,630
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Resenhas
7
ISBNs
53

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