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The Summer of 43: R.A. Dickey's Knuckleball and the Redemption of America's Game (Kindle Single) [Kindle Edition]

Joseph Bottum
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)

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Book Description

The summer of 2012 has become the Summer of 43—as in the summer of R.A. Dickey, the 37-year-old knuckleball pitcher who wears Number 43 on the mound for the New York Mets.

As his knuckleballs flutter and drop through the strike zone, befuddling batters and producing a 12–1 record by the All Star break, Dickey has become one of the greatest feel-good stories of baseball history: the man who found redemption, after years of adversity, by mastering one of the strangest and most difficult pitches in the game.

But it's not just his own redemption that R.A. Dickey has discovered. After the Days of Steroids—the era when baseball went brazen mad and lost itself in a noonday sin—America's game has needed a new narrative. Baseball has been desperate for a better storyline, a new shaping tale. Baseball has needed, for those who love the game, a way to signal its own redemption and its return to the hearts of baseball fans.

A little faith in God—and thereby, a little faith in himself—coupled with years of work, and R.A. Dickey's surrender to the mysteries of the knuckleball has given the man another chance at the greatness that eluded him early in his career. Given baseball itself another chance, for that matter, and promised us all that second chances really do come around in this life.

In "The Summer of 43," the widely published essayist and poet Joseph Bottum takes up this story with verve and skill. The bestselling author of "The Gospel According to Tim" and "The Christmas Plains," he is, as the essayist Andrew Ferguson has noted “one of America’s most gifted writers, with a perfect ear and a matchless style." And in his account of R.A. Dickey, Bottum uncovers both the tragedy and the comedy of baseball—and the joy of a story like R.A. Dickey's.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Having penned the popular Kindle Single The Gospel According to Tim (Tebow), Joseph Bottum knows his way around the nexus of faith and sports. In The Summer of 43, he would have us believe that baseball is a moral game. Who knew? At one end of the spectrum, I suppose, are those comedians who insist that performance-enhancing drugs should be mandatory for all athletes, and at the other, there's Bottum's taxonomical assignment of various pitches into "moral categories." All of which brings us to one R.A. Dickey (the number 43 of the title), whose increasingly unhittable knuckleball has taken Major League Baseball circa 2012 by storm, providing--Bottum argues--the long-awaited antidote to a decade-plus doping story that brought baseball all the way to Congress. Nevertheless, Bottum's passionate essay is more than a purist's screed on "steroids, the sin against which R.A. Dickey is throwing his knuckleball this year." It's also a lofty testament to the dizzying emotional and metaphorical heights that some fans still find in the game. --Jason Kirk

From AudioFile


Product Details

  • File Size: 111 KB
  • Print Length: 25 pages
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services, Inc.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B008HS2X98
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #94,784 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
(25)
3.6 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Grand slam July 6, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition
This is a wonderfully descriptive, authoritative picture of the mysteries of the knuckleball and the resurgence of #43's career after concentrating on regularly hurling that flabbergasting pitch. A fascinating story very well told.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Art of Baseball July 6, 2012
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
I love baseball, have loved it since I was young and would hang with my father as he puttered and listened to baseball. He would watch golf on TV but never baseball, it had to be listened to. Of course that was a time when baseball commentary was king. Joseph Bottum's essay is more for the fan of the ART of baseball, not the mere statistician. So for me the description of the Miamiacs and their stadium I loved. It is also about the paid of the steroid scandals and how it has made us doubt who is playing. Only a pitcher, it seems to me, can avoid that and we get a animated description of how the knuckle ball and one pitcher can give us faith in the game again, to redeem it.

I do take one exception, in the part where he describes "Before 1998, only fifteen players over the previous hundred years of baseball had managed 500 home runs in a career." he fails to mention the one bone of contention I do have with statistics, which there are more games in a season that there used to be so the record (with or without drugs) has more of an opportunity to be broken.

I enjoyed the essay and I think that anyone who likes the sport of baseball, the art of baseball will enjoy it too with the colorful and descriptive passages, which, by his own admission, meander. The meandering gives context and emotion to the narrative. All for $1.99.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By RCH
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
The first six reviewers of this essay make excellent points about its excellence and I won't re-write what they've written, except to say that this is a great story written in great prose. My gripe, pseudo-gripe really, is that Summer of 43 just wasn't long enough for me. I wanted more about Dickey, more about knuckleballs, more about redemption, more about all of it. Hopefully, with the passage of time and events and, possibly, a denouement of some sort to the Dickey story, Bottum will expand this to a full-length book. For now though, this is about as good a way to spend $1.99 as I can think of.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Great book. Well written. An informative and interesting perspective on the impact the use of steroids made on the game, and the redemptive power of one honest man of good... Read more
Published 8 days ago by AJBI
3.0 out of 5 stars Ok read
I love baseball and enjoyed this quick read. However, there is little discussion of Dickey. If you want his story, get his book.
Published 1 month ago by Chad Ettmueller
2.0 out of 5 stars Boring for non fanatics
Used to love baseball but football, which I don't care for, has crowded it off the air. Like every other sport, way too commercial.
Published 3 months ago by Laura L Sinclair
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting
Some good insight into what the knuckle ball is all about. I would have liked it to be longer, more in depth, both about baseball and Mr. Dickey.
Published 3 months ago by cjeso
3.0 out of 5 stars inspirational subject but lightweight writing
While I have great admiration for Dickey and his achievements and contributions in sport and philanthropy I found the writing lacking in literary quality and more akin to the work... Read more
Published 3 months ago by Kenneth Bagshaw
1.0 out of 5 stars Not worth it
The title is very deceiving. There is hardly anything at all about the title person of the book! Don't waste your time or money.
Published 4 months ago by Eva Keegan
4.0 out of 5 stars Baseball Fan's Book
I am very fond of baseball and find books about people I know worth spending time on. Was especially interesting as I followed his career this summer and he ended up the Cy Young... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Ellie McCallum
3.0 out of 5 stars THE SUMMER OF 43
I ONLY READ PART OF IT SO FAR ITS WHAT I REMMEMBER BUT I'LL PROBABLY RATE IT DIFFERENT LATER BUT SO FAR GOOD HISTORY
Published 5 months ago by RON
2.0 out of 5 stars Readable
Readable but not extraordinary. I expected a bit more than an essay reciting common philosophical beliefs and a very brief history.
Published 5 months ago by bunnyg
1.0 out of 5 stars Not worth free
Short and poorly written. A poor magazine article stretched with content less ramblings. No new information or interesting insight. I borrowed it and wish i hadn't.
Published 5 months ago by Ian's Momma
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More About the Author

The author of bestselling Kindle Singles, from "The Gospel According to Tim" to "Dakota Christmas" (revised and expanded as part of his new seasonal volume, "The Christmas Plains"), Joseph Bottum is a widely published essayist and poet, with work in magazines and newspapers from the "Atlantic" to the "Wall Street Journal."

The former literary editor of the "Weekly Standard" and former editor in chief of the journal "First Things," he holds a Ph.D. in medieval philosophy and has done television commentary for networks from the BBC to EWTN, including appearances on NBC's Meet the Press and the PBS NewHour. His books include his latest poetry collection, "The Second Spring."

He lives with his family far off in the Black Hills of South Dakota.



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