In this day of overamped salaries, statistics, and physiques, it's useful to be reminded of the singular talent and impact Babe Ruth brought to baseball during his career (1914-35). He owned most of the hitting records for decades, including single-season and career home runs--and all this during the "dead ball" era. Even now, the baseball fan can only be awed by what Ruth accomplished, not to mention the adulation he engendered. And if Robert Creamer's highly readable
Babe (1974) is still the benchmark biography, Montville (
Ted Williams, 2004) brings fresh observations to his subject, one being that Ruth probably suffered from attention-deficit disorder, which accounts for his inexhaustible energy for everything from baseball to food to alcohol to sex, not necessarily in that order. And in his vivid account of the years Ruth spent at St. Mary's orphanage in Baltimore, Montville gives readers the measure of what made the man. Montville has also carefully sifted the factual from the hearsay, leaving us with a volume that's reliable, readable, and deserving of a place in the sports or American culture collection.
Alan MooresCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
A comprehensive look at a gargantuan life. People
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Montville is refreshingly nonjudgmental about his superstar subject. First-rate biography. Los Angeles Times Book Review
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Crisp analogies and astute observations, combined with a fluid writing style, are Leigh Montville s strengths in this definitive biography of the Splendid Splinter. Montville s writing is rich and full, like a Ted Williams swing. He connects solidly. A raw, no-holds-barred view of [Williams s] life. Tampa Tribune
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An engaging, fascinating read. San Diego Tribune
Ted Williams is not only a first-rate sports biography, but also a first-rate biography, period. Baltimore Sun
--Baltimore Sun
--This text refers to the
Audio CD
edition.