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Fenway: A Biography in Words and Pictures
 
 
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Fenway: A Biography in Words and Pictures [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Dan Shaughnessy , Stan Grossfeld , Ted Williams
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 128 Seiten
  • Verlag: Houghton Mifflin (Trade) (April 1999)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0395945569
  • ISBN-13: 978-0395945568
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 27,9 x 22,4 x 2 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 4.4 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (10 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 2.219.500 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)
  • Komplettes Inhaltsverzeichnis ansehen

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Dan Shaughnessy
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Produktbeschreibungen

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A religious shrine or a giant pinball machine? Museum or amusement park? Historical or hysterical? These are just some of the puzzlers posed by Boston Globe columnist Dan Shaugnessy in this lovely homage to the second oldest, single most complex ballpark in the majors. The answers are debatable. What remains absolute are the images Boston's Fenway Park has burned into the imaginations of the faithful and the faithless since the day it opened, a short week after the Titanic sank.

Shaugnessy and photographer Stan Grossfeld combine to offer an often-spectacular visual tribute that looks both back in time and into the heart of all the park's odd nooks, crannies, shadows, and hiding places. They go inside the hand-operated scoreboard on the fabled Green Monster. There's even a lovely picture of a pastoral Fenway covered in snow. Shaughnessy's text--"When they raze Fenway, it'll be like cutting down an old tree. Count the rings. There's one for each celebration and heartache suffered by Red Sox fans"--is affectionate and quite personal. He adds to it with a series of short, lyrical reminiscences from those who've mused about the field-- David Halberstam, Bob Costas, Stephen King, and Doris Kearns Goodwin--and those who've played on it: Don Zimmer, Bucky Dent, Dennis Eckersley, and Carl Yastrzemski. Fittingly, Ted Williams pens the foreward. The result of the amalgamation is an altogether splendid celebration of a landmark about to be pushed by progress into memory. --Jeff Silverman

Synopsis

A study of America's oldest major league ballpark incorporates interviews with players, coaches, and fans as it chronicles a history of the park and the great teams and athletes who have played there.

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Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
It's obvious that Major League Baseball fans love the home run, because they voted Sammy Sosa, Ken Griffey, Jr., Jose Canseco and Mark McGwire into the All-Star Game at Fenway Park as starters.

No doubt there is great anticipation of seeing four of the greatest sluggers in history take their hacks against the left-field wall known as the Green Monster. And perhaps they can go the other way, toward right field, and land a ball beyond the red seat that marks the longest homer in Fenway's illustrious history - a homer hit by none other than the Splendid Splinter, Ted Williams, more than 50 years ago. According to Pulitzer Prize-winning author and baseball historian David Halberstam, the walk into the park often is as exciting as the game.

"I think walking up to Fenway is thrilling," Halberstam said in a new book published about Fenway. "The approach to it. The smells. You go to Fenway, and you revert to your childhood. You go to Fenway, and you think: 'Something wonderful is going to happen today.'"

In the book - entitled "Fenway, a biography in words and pictures," published this year - writer Dan Shaughnessy of the Boston Globe and photographer Stan Grossfeld, an associated editor at the Globe, pay tribute to one of Major League Baseball's most storied parks. And, due to construction delays on Milwaukee's new stadium, Fenway will be in the national spotlight for perhaps the final time as it hosts its third All-Star Game.

You can't talk about Fenway without talking about the Green Monster, perhaps the most famous outfield wall in baseball history - a wall that Shaughnessy described in his book as a "New England monument, no less so than Bunker Hill Monument, the Old Man of the Mountain or Walden Pond."

The wall was built, Shaughnessy wrote, to keep balls in play. But more memorable are the balls that have sailed over it - home runs like the one hit in 1978 by Bucky Dent, whose pop fly in any other park cleared the Monster and gave the New York Yankees a victory over Boston in a one-game playoff to determine the division champion. And because the Monster is only 309 feet from home plate at the left-field foul pole, plenty of balls have been hit over it. It is the shortest fence of any major-league ballpark, and rules today stipulate that no wall in any park be closer than 325 feet from home plate.

But, as short as it is, at 37 feet high and capped by a 23-foot screen, the Green Monster can frustrate batters like McGwire and Canseco, who may be able to hit the ball far, but not high. It also can make opposing fielders look bad. Jim Palmer told Shaughnessy about the time Baltimore teammate Don Buford saw a ball skip through his legs, turned around to try and retrieve it and then watched the ball zoom through his legs once again after it caromed back off the wall.

It would be difficult to find another sports arena with a feature as famous as Fenway's Green Monster. Frightfully deceiving. Inviting even the most hapless amateur to step tp the plate and try to hit a ball over it.

"You hear a lot about it," Dent told Shaughnessy for the book. "But when you actually walk out there and see the Wall, you realize what an impact it has on you as a player."

Inside the wall is one of baseball's last hand-operated scoreboards that also adds to the allure of Fenway. And with the cozy dimensions of the park - the right-field pole is only 302 feet from home plate - runs could be going up on the board at a fast rate on Tuesday.

It could be the right-field wall that gets McGwire's, Sosa's, Canseco's or Griffey's attention - or, rather, what's beyond that wall. For, just as famous as the Green Monster is a seat in right field that's painted red - the lone red seat in a sea of green ones - that marks the spot where Ted Williams hit the longest measured home run in Fenway's 87-year history. Newspaper accounts at the time claimed that the 1946 blast traveled 450 feet. But the Red Sox measured the distance in the mid-1980s and got an official number of 502 feet.

"It's hard to believe anybody could hit a ball that far," former Boston player Mo Vaughn told Shaughnessy. "I know I've never even come close - not even in batting practice. I mean, it's not even down the line. It's in the gap. You can barely see that thing."

The Monster, the scoreboard, the red seat and the coziness of the park are just some of the features that make Fenway unique. Love it or hate it, the park always seems to evoke emotion, a lot of it captured in the book by Shaughnessy and Grossfeld, a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer whose pictures in the book are as riveting as Shaughnessy's written words.

War diese Rezension für Sie hilfreich?
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
I have really enjoyed reading and viewing this tribute to a great place, Fenway Park. I first saw the Sox play there many, many years ago. This wonderful book brings back some warm memories. I have just ordered two more copies for my sons, who also have deep affection for Fenway. Thanks.
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Von Ein Kunde
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
i write for the boston Herald. Dan steals most of what i know
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Die neuesten Kundenrezensionen
Boston Sports History at its Best...
I found this book delightful. It has a wonderful ring of quality, history and pinache. There is a reason why Stan Grossfeld (the photographer for this book) won 2 Pulitzer Prizes... Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 1. Juni 1999 von michael_fox@alum.mit.edu
90% Perfect
Great pictures, makes for some great reminiscing - but will somebody tell Shaughnessy it's not cool to quote YOURSELF over and over again? Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 21. Mai 1999 veröffentlicht
The Green Monster Lives
For every fan who's seen a game at Fenway or dreams of going someday, this book is a rare find. I gave a copy to someone who has "everything" and was greeted with the... Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 17. Mai 1999 veröffentlicht
THIS IS ONE OF TWO EXCELLENT NEW GIFT BOOKS ON FENWAY PARK
This book, and the equally wonderful FENWAY SAVED, are both perfect gift books for Boston fans and baseball lovers everywhere. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 16. Mai 1999 veröffentlicht
Grand Slam Home Run
Finally there is a book that captures the spirit of Fenway Park, the oldest and greatest of baseball shrines. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 11. April 1999 veröffentlicht
Stupendous! The best baseball book ever!
This is a book for every lover of the game. The photographs are fabulous, the writing crisp and sharp. Every time I open it, I find something new. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 9. April 1999 veröffentlicht
Fenway Fairs Well!
This book gives the true nostalgia that sits within the fabled Fenway Park. The pictures show the spirit that each fan produces when they enter this stadium. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 2. April 1999 veröffentlicht
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