4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Say it's so, Joe., December 7, 2005
This is a historical novel about a fictional baseball game between Major League baseball stars and Negro League baseball stars. All of the major characters in the book were real people, not just the ballplayers. It's well written and entertaining, especially if you are a fan of old time baseball. The characters are probably more articulate than they were in real life, but that's not a bad thing.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The title says it all., October 18, 2005
In October, 1934, James Atwood Gray, an 18-year-old pool hustler from Ossage, Kansas, and John Henry Seadlund, flush with $25,000 from his first kidnapping, repair the Rolls Royce of legendary lawyer Clarence Darrow and then persuade him to drive them to St. Louis. Along the way, they pick up Elmer Dean, youngest brother of St. Louis Cardinals' pitchers Dizzy and Paul Dean, who has four tickets for the World Series in Detroit, to which they immediately head.
Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis has prohibited any Negro League player from playing for a Major League baseball team, so this "World Series" does not necessarily identify the best team in the world. The players themselves know the talent and reputations of the Negro League players. Dizzy Dean of the St. Louis Cardinals has always wondered if he could beat Satchel Paige, and Babe Ruth, who is a newspaper reporter for this World Series, has always wondered if he could out-hit Josh Gibson.
When Satchel Paige decides to set up "the greatest game ever played" between the white World Series champs (St. Louis) and the Negro League All-Stars, he persuades the owner of the Pittsburgh Crawfords of the Negro League--Walter Augustus Greenlee, a racketeer--to bankroll the Negro team. Dizzy Dean, of the World Series-winning St. Louis Cardinals, along with Clarence Darrow, James Atwood Gray, and John Henry Seadlund, persuade Henry Ford, known for his anti-Semitic and anti-Negro stance, to bankroll the White All-Stars, which "must" win the game, to be played in Boston at Fenway Park at night and in secret.
Author Kevin King paints a broad picture of baseball during this period, using folksy language, offbeat characters, and their sometimes outrageous behavior to provide humor and interest. A panoply of famous people play cameo roles in this farce, including George Raft, Carole Lombard, Will Rogers, Dutch Schulz, Lena Horne, Ginger Rogers, Leo Durocher, W. C. Fields, Cecil B. DeMille, and even President Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican Republic. (Boston Red Sox fans will also be startled to discover that venerable Luis Tiant, who later pitched for Boston in the 1975 World Series against the Cincinnati Reds, also plays a role as a pitcher here in 1934!). Louella Parsons covers the Hollywood aspects, and Walter Winchell narrates.
Light and fanciful, the novel is also episodic, however, with characters who are often introduced primarily for their name recognition. The Hollywood parties and the gossip are entertaining, but do not always advance the action, and the novel, at over four hundred pages, could easily have been edited and significantly shortened to improve the pacing. With flat characters and a play-by-play of the "greatest game" which would be far more interesting in a film than in a novel, this is a book that will appeal to die-hard baseball fans and lovers of Hollywood-style high life. (3.5 stars) n Mary Whipple
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
(RAW Rating: 3.5) - Let's go out to the ball game, July 28, 2007
This review is from: All the Stars Came Out That Night (Mass Market Paperback)
Imagine the best of the major league baseball players pitted against the best players in the Negro Baseball league in Fenway Park during the heart of the Depression. Kevin King's fictional account of a one night only, tightly kept secret game between the two teams is the premise of his debut novel, ALL THE STARS CAME OUT THAT NIGHT.
The St. Louis Cardinals have just won the World Series in '34 and are preparing for their off-season. Satchel Paige proposes the idea of the two teams playing. He coaches the players from the Negro league and Dizzy Dean coaches the major league players. During this time, Negro players are not allowed to play in the major leagues so this is an astonishing event. After receiving funding for the game and the blessing from the baseball Commissioner on the condition the game remains a secret, the result is the best game ever played.
Kevin King has offered an excellent piece of historical fiction in ALL THE STARS CAME OUT THAT NIGHT. King is a master of the English language so much so that I had to keep a dictionary handy. He also included several subplots that got away from the overall story. These lag times slowed my reading experience but the action of the game fully captured my attention. Filled with celebrities, influential figures from that era and an awesome line up of players, this was a nice trip back in time to ponder, what if...?
Reviewed by Paula Henderson
of The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers
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