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African Americans - Biography, Sports & Adventurers - Biography, Baseball
Satchel Paige by Lesa Cline-Ransome β€” book cover

Satchel Paige

by Lesa Cline-Ransome, James Ransome
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Overview

No one pitched like Leroy "Satchel" Paige. Fans packed the stands to see how many batters he could strike out in one game. He dazzled them with his unique pitching style, and he even gave nicknames to some of his trademark pitches -- there was the "hesitation," his magic slow ball, and the "bee ball," named because it would always "be" where he wanted it to be.

Follow Satch's career through these beautiful illustrations as he begins playing in the semipros and goes on to become the first African American to pitch in a major League World Series, and the first Negro Leaguer to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Examines the life of the legendary baseball player, who was the first African-American to pitch in a Major League World Series.

Synopsis


No one pitched like Leroy "Satchel" Paige. Fans packed the stands to see how many batters he could strike out in one game. He dazzled them with his unique pitching style, and he even gave nicknames to some of his trademark pitches -- there was the "hesitation," his magic slow ball, and the "bee ball," named because it would always "be" where he wanted it to be.

Follow Satch's career through these beautiful illustrations as he begins playing in the semipros and goes on to become the first African American to pitch in a major League World Series, and the first Negro Leaguer to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

Riverbank Review - Kathryne Beebe

In this engaging biography, we meet a hero who follows rules of his own making and plays the best game in a league where only the ball was white. A formal bibliography at the end and a baseball-cardlike page of vital statistics make this book somewhat sophisticated for the youngest fans, but readers of all abilities can enjoy dynamic illustrations and a story that sounds as if it's being told to you over the backyard fence.

About the Author, Lesa Cline-Ransome


Lesa Cline-Ransome received a bachelor of fine arts degree from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, and a master of arts degree in education from New York University. She taught in a program designed to care for children of teenage parents who were returning to high school. She now writes for children full time. This is her first book with husband James Ransome. Of this book she says, "I hoped to capture the soul of Satchel and the heart of America's game."

Lesa and James live in the Hudson River Valley region of New York with their three children, Jaime, Maya, and Malcolm, and their dalmation, Clinton.

James E. Ransome's highly acclaimed illustrations for Let My People Go won the NAACP Image Award. His other award-winning titles include Coretta Scott King Honor Book Uncle Jed's Barbershop by Margaree King Mitchell, Deborah Hopkinson's Sweet Clara and the Freedom Quilt, and Satchel Paige, written by his wife, Lesa. Mr. Ransome teaches illustration at Pratt Institute and lives in upstate New York with his family. Visit James at his Web site: www.jamesransome.com.

Reviews

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Editorials

Kathryne Beebe

In this engaging biography, we meet a hero who follows rules of his own making and plays the best game in a league where only the ball was white. A formal bibliography at the end and a baseball-cardlike page of vital statistics make this book somewhat sophisticated for the youngest fans, but readers of all abilities can enjoy dynamic illustrations and a story that sounds as if it's being told to you over the backyard fence.
β€” Riverbank Review

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

This first collaboration between a husband-and-wife team offers an informal, anecdotal profile of Leroy "Satchel" Paige, one of the all-time great baseball players of the Negro League, the first black pitcher to play in the major leagues and the first black inductee to the Baseball Hall of Fame. The author's style is conversational and flavorful: after explaining that Paige, the seventh of 12 children, earned money for his family by toting travelers' luggage at the train depot, she writes, "When dimes weren't enough, Leroy took to stealing. And when he could no longer run fast enough, it was stealing that caught him." Sent to reform school at age 12, Paige joined its baseball team and was thrilled to encounter "real leather balls (not the ones your mama made with a rock and a rag) and real wooden bats, too." Kids will enjoy her occasional hyperbole: "[When he stood on the mound], his foot looked to be about a mile long, and when he shot [the ball] into the air, it seemed to block out the sun. Satch's arm seemed to stretch on forever, winding, bending, twisting." Ransome's (Let My People Go) tightly edited, boldly hued oil paintings capture the on-field prowess as well as the personality of the quick-witted, feisty Paige. More sculptural than kinetic, they express the qualities of a man who often seemed larger than life. This vivid book is a fitting tribute to a baseball hero. Ages 6-10. (Jan.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.

Publishers Weekly

PW called this informal, anecdotal profile of the first black pitcher to play in the major leagues and the first black inductee to the Baseball Hall of Fame "a fitting tribute to a baseball hero." Ages 6-10. (Jan.)

Children's Literature - Children's Literature

James E. Ransome has been a consistent contributor to excellence in children's book illustration. Now, joining forces with his wife on her first book, Ransome's bold illustrations complement his wife's dramatic storytelling voice. Lesa places Paige's playful quotes in a simile-studded, vivid narrative, which ebbs and flows with rhythms and expressions that make the great Paige even more mythic and the pacing of the text like Satch's fast ball. Together text and images present Satch--his love of the game, the hard choices poverty presents, and one man's ability to make his own rules in a world limited by prejudice. 2000, Simon and Schuster, Ages 6 to 10, $16.00. Reviewer: Susie Wilde

School Library Journal

Gr 2-4-"Some say Leroy Paige was born six feet three and a half inches tall, 180 pounds, wearing a size fourteen shoe. Not a bit of truth to it." So begins this unaffected biography of the first African-American pitcher to play major league baseball and the first black Baseball Hall of Fame inductee. Written with a storyteller's sense of rhythm and pacing, Paige's history will be best appreciated as a read-aloud. For example, describing life on the road, "From the first breath of spring till the cool rush of fall he would ride. Sometimes he joined his teammates on rickety old buses, bumping along on back roads studded with potholes so deep, players would have to hold on to their seats (and stomachs) just to keep from spilling into the aisles." Paige's frustration and anger with the limitations imposed on black players are mentioned, but emphasis is placed on his talents, popularity, and success. Ransome's rich oil illustrations establish a sense of time and place, reflecting the determination and excitement the man brought to the game. An obvious choice as a biography for younger readers and definitely of interest to baseball fans of all ages, this book is a worthy addition for any collection.-Alicia Eames, New York City Public Schools Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Book Details

Published
December 1, 2002
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
Pages
40
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780689856815

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