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The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball

AUTHOR: Glenn Stout
ISBN: 0618213554

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         Editorial Review

The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball
- Book Review,
by Glenn Stout

From Publishers Weekly
Stout and Johnson, who teamed to write Red Sox Century and Yankees Century, now examine one of baseball's oldest professional teams, the Dodgers, who have enjoyed a long and colorful history on both American coasts. Before the team signed Jackie Robinson, the first African-American player in the majors, the players were a collection of eccentrics, known more for their failures than their successes. But as the authors take recount the team's history in both Brooklyn and Los Angeles, readers learn how the Dodgers became the "Boys of Summer," the antidote to the predictable Yankees (who always seemed to win). They enjoyed a fanatically loyal fan base that was eternally optimistic. This book, which has a family album feel, employs Stout's lively writing and Johnson's exciting, rarely seen images to walk readers down a memory lane peopled with some of the most famous names in the game: Robinson, Koufax, Reese, Snider, Campanella and Drysdale. Essays by noted sportswriters (including Dave Anderson and Jane Leavy) appear intermittently throughout the book's chronological order, giving readers insight into such memorable moments as Sandy Koufax's four no-hitters and Kirk Gibson's improbable home run against the Oakland Athletics in 1988. And number-crunchers will thrill at the numerous tables noting Dodger leaders and award winners. B&w photos. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Carl Furillo. Pee Wee Reese. Duke Snider. For baseball fans of a certain age and persuasion, those names have the resonance of poetry. Their exploits and those of their predecessors and successors on the National League's most storied franchise, from the bums of Brooklyn to the latest batch of interchangeable mercenaries in L.A., are recounted here season by season, game by game, even pitch by pitch. There are lengthy sections on Branch Rickey and Jackie Robinson breaking the color line in 1947, on the "boys of summer" winning an overdue world championship in 1955, on the treacherous Walter O'Malley moving the franchise in 1958, and on Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale staging a ground-breaking holdout in 1966. Heartbreakers such as Bobby Thompson and Don Larson are of necessity mentioned, but the painful memories they evoke are more than balanced by accounts of Fernando Mania and Kirk Gibson's impossibly dramatic home run in the first game of the 1988 World Series. This book will be relished by Dodger fans young and old, and very few others. Fortunately, there are lots of us. Dennis Dodge
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Book Description
Dodgers. The word conjures different things to different people, but its distinction — and notoriety — is universal. In the annals of baseball, the history of few other teams can compare to the rich legacy of the Dodgers. Their constituency includes fans from Bensonhurst to Burbank. Their colorful past — "dem bums," Jackie Robinson and the boys of summer, Walter O"Malley, Sandy Koufax, Tommy Lasorda, "bleeding Dodger blue" — has enlivened baseball in innumerable, immeasurable ways. And their legacy, casting a 120-year shadow, remains essential to the very nature of the game. In a compelling, insightfully written narrative and more than two hundred unforgettable photographs, many never before seen, The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball tells the team's story in its entirety, from its birth in Brooklyn in 1884 and its early glories, to the heart-wrenching move to Los Angeles in 1958, to the present day. The Dodgers' evolution, and particularly their willingness to embrace change even when it was a wildly unpopular choice, is also, writes Glenn Stout in his introduction, "an inherently American story that follows a familiar path, a story of immigration, assimilation, migration, and change." In one of the only books to look at the team as a unified whole, we see how the Dodgers helped create modern baseball in Brooklyn, how they ushered the game into its contemporary form with the signing of Jackie Robinson in 1945, and how they have borne witness to the metamorphosis of baseball from an amateur game played by gentlemen into a multibillion-dollar business. It's all here, a century and more of history-making baseball. In these pages, readers will experience some of the game's finest moments, greatest plays, and most unforgettable players, including• the birth of the "Trolley Dodgers" in an unlikely borough• a legendary series of stirring pennant races in the late 1940s and 1950s• Jackie Robinson and the integration of baseball• the notorious move from East Coast to West at the hands of the much-maligned Walter O"Malley• the reemergence of the Dodgers-Giants rivalry in California• the game's most dynamic pitching duo, Sandy Koufax and Don Drysdale• Kirk Gibson"s dramatic home run in the 1988 World Series* and lively essays by such heralded Dodger chroniclers as Dave Anderson, Jane Leavy, Bill Plaschke, Dick Young, and others


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         Book Review

The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball
- Book Reviews,
by Glenn Stout

The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball

FROM OUR EDITORS

Few baseball franchises can match the proud history of the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers. The team (which has been known variously as "the Trolley Dodgers," "the Superbas," or simply "dem Bums") has been a National League mainstay since 1884. This coffee-table hardcover delineates the history of the Dodgers in both words and pictures. Best American Sport Writing series impresario Glenn Stout presents the definitive story of the team that broke baseball's racial barrier; sports museum curator Richard A. Johnson provides over 200 photographs, half of which previously unpublished in book form.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Dodgers. The name conjures different things to different people, but its distinction -- and notoriety -- are universal. In the annals of baseball, the history of few other teams can compare to the rich legacy of the Dodgers. Their constituency includes fans from Bensonhurst to Burbank. Their colorful past -- "dem bums," Jackie Robinson and the boys of summer, Walter O'Malley, Sandy Koufax, Tommy Lasorda, "bleeding Dodger blue" -- has enlivened baseball in innumerable, immeasurable ways. And their legacy, casting a 120-year shadow, remains essential to the very nature of the game. In a compelling, insightfully written narrative and more than two hundred unforgettable photographs, many never before seen, The Dodgers: 120 Years of Dodgers Baseball tells the team's story in its entirety, from its birth in Brooklyn in 1884 and its early glories, to the heart-wrenching move to Los Angeles in 1958, to the present day.sThe Dodgers' evolution, and particularly their willingness to embrace change even when it was a wildly unpopular choice, is also, writes Glenn Stout in his introduction, "an inherently American story that follows a familiar path, a story of immigration, assimilation, migration, and change." In one of the few books to look at the team as a unified whole, we see how the Dodgers helped create modern baseball in Brooklyn, how they ushered the game into its contemporary form with the signing of Jackie Robinson in 1945, and how they have borne witness to the metamorphosis of baseball from an amateur game played by gentlemen into a multi-billion-dollar business. It's all here, a century and more of history-making baseball. In these pages, readers will experience some of the game's finest moments, greatest plays, and most unforgettable players

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

Stout and Johnson, who teamed to write Red Sox Century and Yankees Century, now examine one of baseball's oldest professional teams, the Dodgers, who have enjoyed a long and colorful history on both American coasts. Before the team signed Jackie Robinson, the first African-American player in the majors, the players were a collection of eccentrics, known more for their failures than their successes. But as the authors take recount the team's history in both Brooklyn and Los Angeles, readers learn how the Dodgers became the "Boys of Summer," the antidote to the predictable Yankees (who always seemed to win). They enjoyed a fanatically loyal fan base that was eternally optimistic. This book, which has a family album feel, employs Stout's lively writing and Johnson's exciting, rarely seen images to walk readers down a memory lane peopled with some of the most famous names in the game: Robinson, Koufax, Reese, Snider, Campanella and Drysdale. Essays by noted sportswriters (including Dave Anderson and Jane Leavy) appear intermittently throughout the book's chronological order, giving readers insight into such memorable moments as Sandy Koufax's four no-hitters and Kirk Gibson's improbable home run against the Oakland Athletics in 1988. And number-crunchers will thrill at the numerous tables noting Dodger leaders and award winners. B&w photos. (Sept. 17) Forecast: Tie-ins to the Dodgers' 120th anniversary will bump sales. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.


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