7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
If you find it, buy it., May 7, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Something to Write Home About: Great Baseball Memories in Letters to a Fan (Hardcover)
Not the typical book--not even just a 'baseball' book. Needs to be seen to be appreciated. Every page is a visual and emotional feast. From pinch hitter Gates Brown writing (the book is made up of all the actual handwritten letters Mr. Swirsky received from these people) about the day he was told to pinch hit an inning before he normally was asked too. He stuffs his half-eaten hot dog in his jersey and then, against his own wishes, slams a ball into the gap. He slides in and when he gets up, his uniform is covered with hot dog and mustard, ketchup and pieces of the bun.Hilarious. I found President George W. Bush's letter very poignant (amazing that he handwrote a 2 page letter)....There are many more. Try and find this book.You will not regret it.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Something to Enjoy, March 30, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Something to Write Home About: Great Baseball Memories in Letters to a Fan (Hardcover)
Reading "Something to Write Home About" made me recall something the photographer Diane Arbus said about her own work: that if she did not photograph certain things, no one would see them. By that she meant not that her subjects--people--were fleeting; rather, that she could see something in people or coax something from them that others could not. Similarly, I am convinced that if Seth Swirsky did not to get people to tell stories, no one would hear them.
One of my favorites is a letter from Margaret Chapman, whose brother Ray became the only major league player to be killed by a pitched ball in 1920. She recalls her brother's life and death, the crowd at the funeral. Her letter is juxtaposed with an image of the funeral that makes you realize the photo-graphic nature of her recollection. Margaret closes by thanking Swirsky for his interest in her brother. How many times in the last 82 years has anyone asked?
Then there is a series of stories that demonstrate how the Red Sox's "Curse of the Bambino" makes itself felt through time:
--Mookie Wilson writes that "my hustle caused the error," and draws a life lesson from game six of the 1986 World Series;
--Bob Costas recalls, that same night, the championship trophy being wheeled into the Red Sox clubhouse together with the frail Mrs. Jean Yawkey, "anticipating the first Bosox title since she was a girl"; minutes later, Mrs. Yawkey, "head down, saying nothing, was gently escorted away";
--Max Frazee, whose great-grandfather Harry sold Babe Ruth to NY, is booed at Fenway in 1993; and
--Paul Giorgio climbs Mount Everest in 2001 to place a Red Sox cap at the summit in an attempt to "reverse the curse."
The book's epistolary form makes it easy to pick up and open at random for a good story. It is a book, like Ritter's classic "Glory of their Times," that can be re-read with pleasure every summer. Somewhere, Stephen Jay Gould is smiling.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Something to Treasure, July 17, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Something to Write Home About: Great Baseball Memories in Letters to a Fan (Hardcover)
This book is truly great in the fact that even after you've read the letters in it, months later, you remember what some people said--and those things were so inspiring: peter tork of the monkees talking about how 'participating' in an event is, in itself, such a great thing to do. Or, Martin Luther's King's photographer, Flip Schulke, remembering what a great dad Dr. King was...i never thought of dr. king as a father, only as a civil rights leader. Or the guy who's grandfather invented wiffleball and what makes it such a special game.With baseball as a backdrop, all of these intyeresting people wrote to the author (along with some of my favorite baseball players).This book is a true gem, not only for what it is when you're reading it, but for what it is when you are NOT reading it.If you just took away from this visually beautiful book a simple life lesson or two (and you take away many more than that), it would be well worth it. it has been to me and those i've given it to. I highly, highly recommend it to anyone who likes...life!
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