Speaking of baseball and race, I would highly recommend David Halberstam's "October 1964," The central theme is how the Cardinals, productively integrating young black stars like Gibson, Flood, White, Brock, etc., created a ball club that brought down the mighty Yankees, who were aging, white, and resistant to integration.
It's also about the dynamics of integration in the clubhouse. It's a fascinating account, for example, of the unique relationship between Gibson, the rising star from the ghetto projects of Omaha and his catcher, McCarver, the teenaged brash mouth from the south. The book portrays a group of athletes, some of whom may not have liked each other personally, but respected each other's race; how both black and white players stood up for each other on and off the field in an era when, even on the integrated teams, blacks went one way and whites another when the game was over.
As a kid growing up in Missouri, I worshiped that team. There was something special about them as a group. Only later as an adult did I realize the depth of how special they were.
P.S. If for no other reason, you have to read it for the story of what happened the first time McCarver hopped up from behind the plate to go out and "settle down" Gibson.