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Aftersleep Books
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The Teammates A Portrait of FriendshipThe following report compares books using the SERCount Rating (base on the result count from the search engine). |
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Aftersleep Books - 2005-06-20 07:00:00 | © Copyright 2004 - www.aftersleep.com () | sitemap | top |
Much of the book is centered around Williams, the most famous of the four, of course, and the most dominating of the personalities. Halberstam does an excellent job painting the characters in such a way that the reader feels he/she really knows them. Such is especially the case with Williams; the intense perfectionist who demanded the most of himself and those around him. Included in this book are stories of Williams' long debate with Doerr over the proper swing (Williams always winning the argument) which is described in a hitting clinic during a fishing trip in 1987. Even a friendly day of fishing with Doerr turned into an uncomfortable situation when Williams believed his friend kept missing opportunities to catch tarpons. The author, in fact, kept the fact that he fished from Williams until after his first interview with the star to avoid a potentially disastrous fishing excursion before he obtained his story (pg. 80). Halberstam describes Williams' poor childhood and homelife to help the reader understand this domineering figure driven always to be the best.
Baseball historians will enjoy the many reminiscences of the old-time players of the day. Halberstam details game seven of the 1946 World Series and Dominic DiMaggio sets the record straight about the infamous Pesky play (Curiously, Williams' views on that play are not revealed). The author also sought out former Red Sox pitchers Tex Houghson and Boo Ferriss to find out what happened to weaken the potentially great Boston pitching staff after their World Series run. Halberstam spent many hours with all four of these players in interviews for other works and had the cooperation of the three surviving teammates and their wives when writing this book. This relationship between author and subject gives the reader confidence in the book's accuracy and sincerity. The book is fast moving (200 pages of text) and well written. It includes the four teammates' career statistics, Boston's standings from 1937-53, and many wonderful photographs.