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Neil Lanctot is the author of Negro League Baseball: The Rise and Ruin of a Black Institution, which won the SABR Seymour Medal for best book of baseball history or biography. Visit the author at www.neillanctot.com.

Werke von Neil Lanctot

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Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
20th Century
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA
Wohnorte
West Chester, Pennsylvania, USA

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This is a fabulously well-researched history of the Negro Leagues, the "separate but not quite equal" baseball leagues in which black players played before white professional baseball deigned to let them play with white players. While they quickly died out after that, as late as 1984 at least one barnstorming team was still active. Be aware, however, that this is NOT the book to read if you want statistics, breathless reminiscences, or fawning portraits of Satchel Paige or Josh Gibson. While they are mentioned, this is a history of the leagues themselves and is focused more on the business end, and the main "characters" are the team owners and league executives. It's not a light read, but necessary for anyone who wants a deep understanding of the leagues. I wouldn't recommend this as someone's first or second read on the subject.… (mehr)
 
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waitingtoderail | Jan 10, 2017 |
Although the prose was bland in spots, the coverage of different topics was interesting. The Jackie Robinson- Roy Campanella feud was one of the central topics in the book. This was a feud that continued after Campanella became a quadrapeligic following a car accident. An accident where the account and details are still murky.
Unlike a previous biography of Campanella, this is a balanced look at his career as a player and his inspirational battle to deal with his handicaps. After several years of tenure in the Negro Leagues, Campanella followed Robinson to the Brooklyn Dodgers as baseball's racial barriers were finally breached. " Who should have been the first to break the color line?" was an enduring sore point between them, though they downplayed this issue in their public posturing. Campanella went on to win 3 MVP awards and while he was a media and fan favorite, he succumbed to the temptations of fame and success that accompany celebrity status. His domestic life would be marked by discord and tragedy while he won the hearts of millions with his feats on the field and his later determination to use his impaired physical condition to benefit others.
" Campy" is more nuanced than the usual sports biography. He was both heroic and flawed; affable and spiteful. This work discloses the bitter and the sweet.
… (mehr)
 
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VGAHarris | 1 weitere Rezension | Jan 19, 2015 |
Behind Jackie Robinson an army of black players was waiting on their chance to play in the Major League. Some of them already played in the farm systems of the big teams. One of them was Roy Campanella, the future MVP catcher of the Brooklyn Dodgers. 'Campy, the two lives of Roy Campanella' by Neil Lanctot tells the story of Roy from his childhood days in Philadelphia, always looking for a game of street baseball. His teenage years when he started to play in organized games. His rise through the ranks in the Negro League. The years behind the plate for the Dodgers and the tragic car accident which ended his active baseball playing career. Neil Lanctot has made this a very easy to read, enjoyable book that makes you love that somewhat overweight catcher. Every year you hope the Dodgers will win that World Series title, although you know it was only in 1955 when they finally did. My hat off to Lanctot for keeping the suspense and making this a gripping read. One of the most interesting things is the difference between Jackie Robinson and Campy. Jackie, who went to UCLA, was the guy who broke through the color barrier first and always stayed serious about equal rights. Campy, who grew up poor and did not go to college and quit school to follow his heart and play baseball, always thought himself lucky to be playing in the majors. This eventually leads to a falling out between the two. Because this ia not an autobiography the writer can take some distance from his subject. At times Lanctot is critical about Campanella. For instane how he had a knack for changing his stories or beef them up to make them more interesting. Never with bad intentions, though. Campy wanted to entertain! The part about Campy's revalidation is much shorter. But it's interesting to read how the always smiling Campanella also had his lesser moments, but he always tried to keep them to himself. He became a speaker for the handicapped and even, at long last, a voice for civil rights, this to the delight of Jackie Robinson. Still, most of the 428 pages are about the happy, smiling, catching Campy. He once said: "You have to be a man to be a big league ballplayer, but you have to have a lot of little boy in you too'. That is Campanella spot on. He is and will always be one of my favorite Dodgers.… (mehr)
 
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DutchDodger | 1 weitere Rezension | Jul 10, 2013 |

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Werke
6
Mitglieder
191
Beliebtheit
#114,255
Bewertung
3.9
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
11

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