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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
An eloquent, erudite, and decent man, August 4, 1999
By A Customer
The collected writings of Bart Giamatti demonstrate the depth of appreciation he had toward our game. The first paragraph of "Green Fields of the Mind" alone should be the centerpiece for the canon of sports literature. His high esteem for all that is right in sports is further evinced in his courageous moral stand against Pete Rose. Perhaps all the Pete Rose people would be well-served by reading this book. They would gain an exponentially greater appreciation for the wonder of baseball and afford themselves the opportunity to reflect on why Mr. Rose does not deserve a place in its shrine. The only shame involving Giamatti is that he did not live long enough to eloquently and courageously defend his side of the sordid Rose affair, while Pete is able to hawk memorabilia, bleat self-righteously about his case, and sell his name to anyone with a fistful of cash and an agenda. However, while it is tragic that Giamatti passed on too soon, we are lucky to have his writings to further stoke our interest in the great game, and to remind ourselves that some things are still worth fighting for.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
Finally, Thankfully, February 11, 1999
By A Customer
I read the essay "Green Fields of the Mind" in 1990 and have waited for a collection of Giamatti's work ever since. I know no other writer who so eloquently captures not only the magic of baseball, but how we experience it. I wish I could be half as passionate about my life as Giamatti was about the game we love. Buy the book and count how many times you tell yourself during its reading that you either need to lend it to a friend or buy a copy for someone you love. It transcends baseball without the obvious pretentions of academia. Should be read just before opening day, again on the day your favorite team is eliminated for the season and once more during the off-season.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
A very passionate man, July 17, 2000
Throughout this book Giamatti is referred to as an idealist by others and at least once by himself. There is not a more accurate description of his writings contained in "A Great and Glorious Game." What seperated Giamatti from others of like mind was his ability to act upon his impulses. Most famously, banishing Pete Rose from ever being associated with baseball again. An incredible unfortunate situation, but to all those who cannot accept Giamatti's judgment please read this book. For myself it clarified his motives and subsequent actions. Beyond anything to do with Rose, this book is thoroughly engaging. Giamatti deftly exemplifies why many of us continually return to baseball every spring. Recommended for any baseball fan.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
just loved this book..., January 3, 2002
I read this book outloud with my 12-year-old son in October 2000 during the playoffs and world series. We had borrowed it from the library, and ever since then he's been asking me to buy it. We finally have and now he's reading it again on his own. I thought it was too advanced for him, but there is a passion in this book you can't miss.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Not for ( ), June 13, 2000
By A Customer
Giamatti's short tenure restored dignity and eloquence to the game. By stopping corruption in it's tracks he brought his level-headed love of the game to it's most powerful position. A man of letters and the arts, he reinvented the position he took over, most recently held by spin-doctors and PR men. It's nothing short of tragic that the game he loved undoubtedly contributed to his untimely end. For those who worship Pete Rose: Giamatti did what any true fan of baseball would do. Punished the most heinous crime possible against the game of baseball. Had Rose never played the game, it would still be the greatest game ever. Had he gone unpunished, it would currently rank somewhere between Professional Wrestling and Arena Football in the eyes of the public today.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
A man of letters writes eloquently about the game he loved., January 16, 1999
May I humbly suggest that if you love baseball as Bart Giamatti loved baseball, that you read this book. A master of language, who loved this game as I love this game, put his genius to work to create this idyllic tome.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
A Glorious Book About A Glorious Game, January 2, 2004
When renaissance scholar A. Bartlett Giamatti was asked to become president of Yale University, he said the only presidency he had ever aspired to was that of the American League. Instead, a few years later, he took the helm of the National League, and shortly after that, became commissioner of baseball. Tragically, his tenure in that office ended after only five months with his sudden death at the age of 51.
But Giamatti's legacy endures. and those who seek to understand or re-embrace it need only turn to this gem of a book. It's all here, opening with his wonderful essay, "The Green Fields of The Mind," which famously begins "It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart." There's his farewell to Tom Seaver, where the departure of Seaver and his wife Nancy from the Mets calls to mind a famous painting of Adam and Eve's expulsion from Eden. The book closes with its most powerful and saddest item--a statement Giamatti released to the press after banning Pete Rose from the game for life for betting on baseball.
If you love the "great and glorious game," you must read this book. Savor the beauty of the prose and the passionate idealism that drives it. And pause for a moment to reflect on what the game--and the world--lost with Bart Giamatti's passing.--William C. Hall
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
The dignity of this great game., October 24, 2000
Mr. Giamatti is very eloquent in his writings on the game of baseball. Of the many chapters, the one most appealing is the last chapter on Peter Edward Rose. I am an extreme fan of this great game and his words on that issue alone send chills through me everytime I read it.If you love baseball, then you will love reading this book.
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The Soul of Baseball at It's Intellectual Best, March 20, 2008
Bartlett Giamatti's essays provide you with a delightful dimension of the national pastime which you will find in no other source. It reflect's one man's eloquent love of the game before and beyond the hoopla, hype and heavy hand of greed. It is a very refreshing, quick read worthy of your investment of time and a few dollars less than a movie ticket!
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Baseball is a metaphor for life of Bart Giamatti, December 31, 2007
Bart Giamatti's baseball story is really a metaphor for life, and he undoubtedly intended it as such. He was a masterful wrangler of the English language and indispustably the best-educated commissioner of baseball ever. His story doesn't rely on his education, though. He felt and lived his life-long love of the Boston Red Sox and never gave up on them. I'm so sorry he didn't live to see the Red Sox win the World Series. I watched the 1986 series and despaired of the Red Sox, thinking of Bart as he must have watched, too. What a great man and wonderful mentor--Bart Giamatti was one in a million, and it's too bad he died so young.
I've always thought Pete Rose "killed" him, though I suppose it was just that Bart's heart couldn't stand the stress.
Bart Giamatti will always live in my heart, and besides his wonderful work in Renaissance literature and mythography, I will always prize his baseball writings as the essence of a fine man.
Susan McDanielBart: A Life of A. Bartlett Giamatti, by Him and About Him (A Harvest/Hbj Book)
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