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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WELL WRITTEN AND ENJOYABLE,
This review is from: Satchel Paige's America (Alabama Fire Ant) (Paperback)
As already noted, this work is the results of a seven day or so interview of the great Satchel Paige by the author in 1970. It is far more than simply a book of "baseball war stories." The interview clearly illuminates the personality of one of the greatest baseball players who ever lived (beyond a doubt the best pitcher). There was much more here, to this man than just a great arm. The author captures Paige's somewhat erratic personality. The man, Paige, was certainly a character and much more that a simple "jock." On the other hand, reading between the lines, there is a whimsical sadness ever present. As you read, you cannot help but wonder what might have been had the times been different. You get the feeling that Paige knew, ergo, the sadness. Recommend this one for any baseball fan or those simply interested in or countries history, warts and all.
4.0 out of 5 stars
Satchel Paige's America - Evaluation of Product & Service,
This review is from: Satchel Paige's America (Alabama Fire Ant) (Paperback)
Theb book was interesting and informative. I enjoyed it very much.
The price was reasonable and the service was timely and satisfactory.
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Myth or Journalism?,
By
This review is from: Satchel Paige's America (Alabama Fire Ant) (Paperback)
This rather unflattering portrait of a self-indulgent and motor-mouthed Satchel Paige adds little new to either the Paige legend or the history of the baseball era he represented. It also raises some serious questions about the author's journalistic approach. Why does Paige--so lucid in memory on all other matters--boast of facing Mickey Mantle during the 1948 pennant race (Mantle was a rookie in 1951), clinching the tight pennant race by defeating the Yankees (Cleveland won in a playoff with Boston), or facing manager Casey Stengel that year (when Stengel didn't arrive on the Yankee bench until 1949)? If Paige is simply forgetful or chooses to purposely distort historical facts, was doesn't the author/interviewer point this out in a footnote, or perhaps in his postscript? And how could Paige's several days of detailed and colorful ramblings be here reported in such word-for-word detail and in Paige's supposed own words if the author/interviewer made no tape recordings (something Fox claims in the postscript)? One leaves this book wondering how much in its pages is actually Satchel and how much is a fictional character dreamed up by Bill Fox?
The treatment of this supposed 1970 in-depth interview with Paige is also quite repetitious in spots (much of the Postscript is a reprise of Chapter 1) and thus the treatment seemingly lends itself far more to the original intended magazine piece and not to a full-length book. There is also little here (despite the book's misleading title) that captures the flavor of America during the 1930s and 40s eras in which Paige played. There are far better portraits available of Satchel Paige, especially those written by Negro leagues historian John Holway.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully written,
By Dave 1965 "reviewer 347916" (Knoxville, TN) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Satchel Paige's America (Alabama Fire Ant) (Paperback)
This guy can write - it was hard to put this book down but yet I wanted to savor it. Great stories, great writing, just buy it. I wish he would retire from teaching and just write!
1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
On the Library Journal's Best Book List of 2005,
This review is from: Satchel Paige's America (Alabama Fire Ant) (Paperback)
Lots of writers have praised William Price Fox's work: Walt Kelly (the creator of Pogo), John Updike, P.G. Wodehouse, Pauline Kael, and, yes, even Bruce Springsteen (Springsteen's song, "Darlington County", was based on Fox's book, Dixiana Moon), Richard Yates, Michael Murphy (Golf in the Kingdom), and then some.
And now the Library Journal (the number one publication for Libraries in America) has ranked Satchel Paige's America as one of the top 25 books to read in 2005. Hopefully more and more people will take notice of his great work once again. For those who have never been introduced to Fox's work, I highly recommend reading his collection of Short Stories: SOUTHERN FRIED. (Shel Silverstein wrote the music for a play based on this work of fiction.) |
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Satchel Paige's America (Alabama Fire Ant) by William Price Fox (Paperback - March 16, 2005)
$17.95
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