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The New York Yankees An Informal History Frank Graham New Foreword by Leonard Koppett
March
2002 paper,
0-8093-2414-8, $18.00t 320 pages, 24 illus., 5 1/2 x 8
Richard Peterson, series editor
“If you’re interested in the Yankees (and who isn’t), you’re a sucker if you don’t buy Frank Graham’s splendid The New York Yankees.” —Bob
Considine, New York Mirror
In
January of 1903, American League president Ban Johnson, “his pince-nez
riding precariously on the bridge of his nose,” raised a glass to toast
his young baseball league, which had just received permission to purchase
the Baltimore organization and establish a team in New York City. That
marked the genesis of the fabulous Yankee franchise (known in 1903 as the
Highlanders) as well as the opening chapter of Frank Graham’s The New
York Yankees: An Informal History. One of fifteen team histories
commissioned by G. P. Putnam’s Sons in the 1940s and 1950s, The New
York Yankees traces the most successful team in either league from the
beginning through their
1943 World Series victory over the Cardinals, ending with a quick synopsis
of the 1944 season.
In
Yankee (and baseball) history, of course, Babe Ruth stands above all the
rest, but he is flanked by such legends as Joe DiMaggio and Lou Gehrig.
Wee Willie Keeler is there, too, joined by fellow Hall of Famers Charlie
“Red” Ruffing,
Herb Pennock, and Bill Dickey. The Hall of Fame lineup also includes
Miller Huggins, Lefty Gomez, Ed Barrow, Joe McCarthy, Tony Lazzeri, Waite
Hoyt, and Earle Combs.
In
his foreword, Leonard Koppett writes that Graham’s “New York Sun columns
called ‘Overheard in the Dugout’ delighted me as I was growing
up; but what I learned later, when I got to work alongside him, was that
they were as good and as reliable as court transcripts. He didn’t take a
lot of notes. He just absorbed what was being said—and what it meant in
the right context—and reproduced it in graceful prose and natural
speech. It is this style of narration through dialogue that makes his
books come so alive.”
Twenty-four
black-and-white Yankee photographs enliven Graham’s informal history.
Leonard Koppett, who covered the Dodgers, Yankees, and Giants for the New York Herald Tribune, the New York Post, and the New York Times, is the author of numerous baseball books including The Man in the Dugout and Thinking Man’s Guide to Baseball. Known as an intellectual sportswriter and guru to hundreds of writers, Koppett received the prestigious J. G. Taylor Spink Award from the Baseball Writers of America in 1992, which placed him in the writer’s wing of the Hall of Fame.
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