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- Joined: Thu Aug 23, 2012 7:26 pm
I’ve always been reluctant to recommend books I have enjoyed to others, mainly because my taste runs to an eclectic mix of non-fiction. In fact, until this week, there was only one fiction work on my all-time list of top 10 books (“Lonesome Dove, by Larry McMurtry). That has now changed.
Maybe 10-15 years ago, before Kindles, Nooks, I-pads and the like, I ordered audio books to ease the freeway commutes to and from work in Southern California. One of the audio tapes I listened to was an incredibly well-narrated cassette called “Veracruz Blues.” a novel based almost entirely on fact, about the 1946 raid on baseball players of all races by Jorge Pasquel, the millionaire owner of the Veracruz Blues.
The other week, as I drafted Ray Dandridge on one of my teams, I was reminded of it and trackied down a used copy on Amazon, I read it in about three hours, and it is now the second work of fiction on my top 10 list.
It features wonderful details of many of the 25 ML whites who jumped to Mexico for Pasquel’s dollars, like Danny Gardella, who leaped after having a good season for the Giants diring the war years. He might have had his own Strat card if manager Mel Ott hadn’t hated him and if Van Lingle Mungo hadn’t peed on his leg once in the showers. He was followed by Max Lanier, Sal Maglie, Mickey Owen, Vern Stephens and others.
It is also the story of Dolph Luque, who won a World Series game against the Black Sox in 1919 and then managed in Cuba and Mexico until coming out of retirement at age 60 to throw the final pitches of the ‘46 Mexican league season—and of other ML Cubans such as Luis Olmo, Bobby Estalella and the gentle HR champ, Roberto Ortiz, who had a Senators card in the 1941 Strat season recreation.
Then there are the blacks—Dandridge, Burnis (Wild Bill) Walker, Bonnie Serrell, Double Duty Radcliffe and Theolic (Fireball) Smith (google him!) And, of course, cameo appearances by the likes of Babe Ruth, Ernest Hemingway, Gene Tunney , the beautiful Mexican actress Maria Felix and the poet Diana James, all part of Mexican baseball lore. But it’s not just a baseball book; it uses the sport as a lens through which to examine postwar life in both America and Mexico, particularly the difference in how black players were regarded in each..
Honestly, I would not recommend this book to anyone but you guys, and only to those of you who, like me, are still enchanted by the history of the sport.
The book was published in 1996 by Penguin Books. The author is Mark Winegardner. If you can track down a copy, it is a marvelous read. I cannot recommend it more highly.
Tom
Maybe 10-15 years ago, before Kindles, Nooks, I-pads and the like, I ordered audio books to ease the freeway commutes to and from work in Southern California. One of the audio tapes I listened to was an incredibly well-narrated cassette called “Veracruz Blues.” a novel based almost entirely on fact, about the 1946 raid on baseball players of all races by Jorge Pasquel, the millionaire owner of the Veracruz Blues.
The other week, as I drafted Ray Dandridge on one of my teams, I was reminded of it and trackied down a used copy on Amazon, I read it in about three hours, and it is now the second work of fiction on my top 10 list.
It features wonderful details of many of the 25 ML whites who jumped to Mexico for Pasquel’s dollars, like Danny Gardella, who leaped after having a good season for the Giants diring the war years. He might have had his own Strat card if manager Mel Ott hadn’t hated him and if Van Lingle Mungo hadn’t peed on his leg once in the showers. He was followed by Max Lanier, Sal Maglie, Mickey Owen, Vern Stephens and others.
It is also the story of Dolph Luque, who won a World Series game against the Black Sox in 1919 and then managed in Cuba and Mexico until coming out of retirement at age 60 to throw the final pitches of the ‘46 Mexican league season—and of other ML Cubans such as Luis Olmo, Bobby Estalella and the gentle HR champ, Roberto Ortiz, who had a Senators card in the 1941 Strat season recreation.
Then there are the blacks—Dandridge, Burnis (Wild Bill) Walker, Bonnie Serrell, Double Duty Radcliffe and Theolic (Fireball) Smith (google him!) And, of course, cameo appearances by the likes of Babe Ruth, Ernest Hemingway, Gene Tunney , the beautiful Mexican actress Maria Felix and the poet Diana James, all part of Mexican baseball lore. But it’s not just a baseball book; it uses the sport as a lens through which to examine postwar life in both America and Mexico, particularly the difference in how black players were regarded in each..
Honestly, I would not recommend this book to anyone but you guys, and only to those of you who, like me, are still enchanted by the history of the sport.
The book was published in 1996 by Penguin Books. The author is Mark Winegardner. If you can track down a copy, it is a marvelous read. I cannot recommend it more highly.
Tom