Major League Teams - National League, Baseball Player & Coaches - Biography, Baseball Players - Pitchers & Catchers
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Editorials
Publishers Weekly -
It is curious that after decades of neglect, Hall of Fame pitcher Dizzy Dean (1910-1974) should be the subject of two biographies in the same month. Robert Gregory's Diz (Nonfiction Forecasts, Nov. 29), although it does not neglect the colorful side of the athlete and broadcaster, takes a more conventional approach, while the book in hand is anecdotal. Staten ( Unauthorized America ) tries to identify the apocryphal stories, many the result of sportswriters' imaginations, but he relates them nevertheless. The result is a singularly readable account which includes Dizzy's accurate prophetic boast that he and brother Paul would win at least 45 games for the Cardinals in 1934 as well as his response to criticism of his grammar by English teachers: ``Lots of people who ain't sayin' `ain't' ain't eatin'.'' Never a dull moment. Appendixes include a glossary of Dean's unique usages and neologisms. Photos not seen by PW . (Feb.)Booknews
Staten has woven dozens, if not hundreds, of Dizzy Dean stories into a colorful biography of the great St. Louis pitcher who went on to a long and successful broadcasting career. With six appendices, and 16 pages of b&w photos. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)Book Details
Published
February 1, 1992
Publisher
Harpercollins
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780060165147