I was the hero of Operation Shutdown, in which I decided to sulk & moan for being benched following a season in which I batted .173 for my $5M yearly salary.
In fairness to Tom Adelman's book, The
Long Ball: The Summer of '75-Spaceman, Catfish, Charlie Hustle, and the
Greatest World Series Ever Played, I should begin by saying that I
read a number of reader reviews before writing this one; they nearly all
praised Adelman's book lavishly. Some readers offered tentative
reservations, but they were few. Next, I should include some quotes about
Adelman's writing style: "His eye for ingenious description is
mesmerizing," "His characters and prose pulse with electric
vitality," and "I know of no one who writes with more passion
and more soul."
That being said, I will go directly to the point: this is an absolutely
terrible book. It is composed of five parts-the first four describe the 1975
season and the fifth describes the 1975 post-season. The book reads as
if the first parts were written after the author realized that there was
not enough material to write a book about the 1975 playoffs and World
Series. These early chapters, for example, begin with standings, yet often
make no mention of those standings, making them look like filler. One
chapter contains only three and a half pages of prose, starts with
disconnected anecdotes about Billy
Martin, describes a single game in which John
Mayberry hit three home runs (connected to the story only by the fact
that Martin was the opposing manager), shifts for no reason to a paragraph
about Dick
Williams and Robin
Yount, and ends with an anecdote about George Brett sliding hard into
Robin Yount that has nothing to do with the chapter, the 1975 season, or
anything else in the book, except that it happened in 1975.
Fisk
Fisk's magical homer
was only enough to force a game 7.
This highly disconnected nature of the book's stories is the main
reason why it does not read well. Any given chapter might contain
anecdotes about Casey
Stengel, Mickey
Mantle, Pete
Rose, Charlie
Lau, or Vicki Bench, and it is difficult to tell why they are
presented together. I suspect that it can be traced to Adelman's
fascination with coincidence because he treats any intersection of lives
or events as wondrous, no matter how quotidian.
The book is frustrating as well because it is impossible to separate
fact from fiction. (One reviewer referred to it as a novel). Adelman has Carl
Yastrzemski wondering what the price of potatoes is before hitting a
home run; he traces Barry
Bonds' habit of choking up to a time when he was small and unable to
hold big bats; he has Pete
Rose wishing that he could play the infield so that the fans would
stop throwing cherry bombs at him; he claims that Luis
Tiant's father had such a baffling delivery that batters used to swing
when he threw to first base; and he has Fred
Norman's skin looking "sickly and green" during a game,
which, we learn, is common for players during night games at Shea
Stadium. (Note: Coincidentally, I saw a game last night at Shea
Stadium and none of the players appeared either green or sickly, despite
playing sixteen innings. Perhaps the lighting is better now). Indeed, the
book's first half should probably be categorized as historical fiction.
Worst of all is what Adelman misses. He tells the story of Catfish
Hunter's free agency in a few pages without any analysis.
Consequently, Marvin
Miller, the players' union, and Andy
Messersmith are passing actors in a chronological tale whose import
lies with their occasional appearance in the 1975 headlines. He mentions
Ted Turner's acquisition of the Braves (the deal was finalized in 1976) by
telling a story about Turner's disgust with the Braves' cheap marketing
ploys; given that Turner's broadcasting network revolutionized the game,
the complete story would have been fascinating. Adelman ignores numerous
opportunities like these.
Unfortunately, this is not the story of the 1975 season as Adelman
claims. It is a series of stories that the author gleaned from biographies
of famous players such as Carl
Yastrzemski, Sparky
Anderson, Catfish
Hunter, Sparky
Lyle, and Reggie
Jackson. The first half reads like inflated 1920s sports journalism
and the last half reads like an endless game summary. The book's few
interesting facts don't merit the time it would take to discover them. The
good news is that the fascinating story of the 1975 season remains to be
written and Adelman has shown us how not to write it.
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