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The
Brooklyn Dodgers An
Informal History Frank
Graham New
Foreword by Jack Lang
March
2002 paper, 0-8093-2413-X, $18.00t Richard Peterson, series editor
First
published in 1945 as part of the acclaimed Putnam series of team
histories, Frank Graham’s colorful chronicle presents the Brooklyn
Dodgers in “all their glory and all their daffiness” from the team’s
beginnings as the Atlantics in 1883 through 1943, with a short summary of
the 1944 season.
In
his foreword, Hall of Fame sports writer Jack Lang writes that “in an
era that produced for New York sports fans such outstanding sportswriters
as Grantland Rice, Sid Mercer, Bill Slocum, Bob Considine, and Tommy
Holmes, one of the very best was Frank Graham, whose columns appeared in
the New York Sun and later the Journal-American.”
Graham
covers every aspect of the Dodgers—games, fans, players, managers,
executives. And these Dodgers produced their share of legends: Wee Willie
Keeler, Mickey Owen, Dazzy Vance, Babe Herman, Charles H. Ebbets, Wilbert
Robinson, Charles Byrne, Casey Stengel, Leo Durocher, Zack Wheat, Burleigh
Grimes, Steve McKeever, Ed McKeever, Larry MacPhail, Max Carey, Dixie
Walker, Branch Rickey, Dolph Camilli, Hugh Casey, Nap Rucker, Van Lingle
Mungo, and the voice of the Dodgers, Red Barber.
Dealing
with the various executives, Graham notes that in the beginning, Charles
Ebbets did everything from selling tickets and scorecards to helping out
in the front office. In the 1930s, the inept Dodgers provoked laughter
until Larry MacPhail moved from Cincinnati to Brooklyn in 1938; one year
later, the Dodgers were contenders. When MacPhail departed for the Army
after the 1942 season, Branch Rickey succeeded him. Rickey’s scouts
signed every youngster who could hit, run, or throw, even though many of
them were headed for the war. “When they came back in 1946,” Lang
explains, “Rickey had cornered the market on the nation’s young
talent—more than six hundred ballplayers.”
This
history of the Brooklyn Dodgers contains eighteen black-and-white
illustrations.
Beginning his career in 1946, Jack Lang covered baseball for the Long Island Press and the New York Daily News for six decades. He covered the Brooklyn Dodgers until they left for Los Angeles in the late 1950s, when his beat switched to the Yankees and the Mets. He witnessed Jackie Robinson’s major-league debut and covered the careers of Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris. Lang received the prestigious J. G. Taylor Spink Award from the Baseball Writers of America in 1986, which placed him in the writers’ wing of the Hall of Fame.
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