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Veeck--As in Wreck: The Autobiography of Bill Veeck
 
 
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Veeck--As in Wreck: The Autobiography of Bill Veeck [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

William Louis, Jr. Veeck , Bill Veeck , Ed Linn

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Bill Veeck
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Produktbeschreibungen

Kurzbeschreibung

Foreword by Bob Verdi1. A Can of Beer, a Slice of Cake--and Thou, Eddie Gaedel2. A Man of Dignity3. The Battle of Wrigley Field4. The First Fine Careless Rapture of Milwaukee5. A Universal-International Production6. Dinner with Boudreau7. Every Day Was Mardi Gras...8. ...and Every Fan Was King9. One $200,000 Dog for Two $100,000 Cats10. The Name of the Game is Gamesmanship11. It Only Takes One Leg to Walk Away12. Leroy Had Been There Before13. An Epitaph for Harry Grabiner14. The Jolly Set15. I'm from Missouri--Momentarily16. The Greatest Right-handed Hitter of All Time17. The Asterisk King18. A Warm Spiritual Message from the Del E. Webb Corp.19. Right Between the Shoulder Blades20. A Night at Toots Shor's21. Dynasties Are for the Dinosaurs22. Chuck Comiskey and the National Debt23. The South Side Shall Rise Again24. How We Bought the Minor Leagues Back to Los Angeles25. I'm Not Handicapped; I'm CrippledAfterword by Ed Linn

Synopsis

Bill Veeck was a team builder, showman and one of the greatest baseball men ever involved in the game. This autobiography offers information about the history of baseball and tales of players and owners.

In diesem Buch (Mehr dazu)
Einleitungssatz
IN 1951, in a moment of madness, I became owner and operator of a collection of old rags and tags known to baseball historians as the St. Louis Browns. Lesen Sie die erste Seite
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Wortanzeiger
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Buchdeckel | Copyright | Inhaltsverzeichnis | Auszug | Rückseite
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Amazon.com:  30 Rezensionen
25 von 25 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
he believed baseball should be fun--novel concept! 8. Juli 1998
Von J. K. Kelley - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch
The book takes you through the career of Bill Veeck, owner and operator of many baseball teams over a fifty-year period. If you truly love baseball, you want to read it.

Why? Easy enough--Bill loved baseball, so much so that he never sat in fancy box seats at games but preferred to join the fans in the bleachers. He is hilarious, as in sidesplitting; he has many stories to tell about the funnier incidents he's been involved in. And when you run a team Veeck style, you have a lot of funny incidents.

But the book is not just a compilation of Veeck buffoonery; he has strong feelings on many topics and expresses them with clarity and frankness. There are tributes to magnificent performances and courageous actions throughout the book. When you finish it, if you love the game, you wish only that you could have been an office staff person or groundskeeper following Bill through his career. You could never possibly have been bored (or made much money).

This book is in the class of _Ball Four_--a defining work that gives real insight into real baseball. To read it is to delight in the game.

As a partner, enough credit is not given Ed Linn. I don't know how Ed does it, but any book written with him will be entertaining, well written, and will above all preserve the main figure's personal style. I believe it is Ed's talent that takes the reminisces of sports figures and makes them a good read, and this deserves your appreciation and respect.

24 von 25 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
They do not make sports bios Like THIS anymore..... 18. September 2002
Von Jason A. Miller - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Taschenbuch|Von Amazon bestätigter Kauf
The two things you need to know before you buy "Veeck -- As In Wreck" -- and you will buy this book, you must, if you've ever bought any professional sports bio before -- are the names Veeck and Linn.

Bill Veeck you know from reputation -- the wacky promoter who invented everything from Ladies' Day to Disco Demolition Night. The man owned several baseball franchises (including the Chicago White Sox twice, for some reason), and was known as a both a promotional genius and a shrewd financier.

As for Ed Linn... well, Linn was also the ghostwriter for another fantastic, edgy, opinionated baseball book, Leo Durocher's "Nice Guys Finish Last". Not surprisingly, "Veeck" reads a lot like the Durocher tome (and it came first, too!). On every page here you'll find a funny anecdote, a scary bit of prescience, and a unique look at an otherwise-beloved icon. With Veeck's memory and Linn's acid pen, this book is quite hard to put down. Or to pick up, for that matter.

Sports bios tend to hold back these days, let's face it. They're not as long and not as insightful as the Linn books. And the gift of time has helped ripen these pages. When Veeck talks about baseball's financial need to institute interleague play -- writing from 1961 -- you know this man saw around a few decades' worth of corners. When he takes the Yankees to task for failing to capitalize on Roger Maris's pursuit of the Babe Ruth home run record, and notes that it was a once-in-a-lifetime event, he's right -- so baseball got it right in '98, when McGwire came to town, and when the record fell yet again in '01, hardly anyone noticed.

In the meantime you'll laugh at the sad fates of Bobo Holloman and Frank Saucier, the latter being the only ballplayer ever to be removed from a game for a midget. You'll be intrigued by Veeck's take on Larry Doby, and by his bitter retorts at Del Webb, then-owner of the hated behemoth Yankees. And you'll marvel at just how little has really changed in baseball since Veeck was retired. Owners plotting franchise shifts in shady back-room deals (Montreal, Florida. Florida, Boston). Owners doing everything to baseball except what really benefits the sport (It's a tie in Milwaukee!). Veeck lamenting not the high price of talent but rather the high price of mediocrity (how much is Colorado paying for Denny Neagle and Mike Hampton?)...

Just about the only highlight not covered is the sight of White Sox outfielder Chet Lemon wearing shorts. One of the few Bill Veeck innovations that did not catch on, and aren't we all better off...

8 von 8 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Veeck As in Wreck 20. August 2000
Von Robert H. Command - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
A wonderful slice of baseball history as seen from the consumate maverick of baseball. Veeck takes you on a journey from his beginnings listenning to John McGraw and his dad William Veeck Sr. shoot the breeze about baseball up until his purchase of the White Sox for the second time in 1975. Along the way you are introduced to those you may have never knew (Gene Bearden and Harry Grabiner), those you always knew (Eddie Gaedel, Satchel Paige and Lou Boudreau) and those you though you knew (Ford Frick, Del Webb and Charles Comiskey). The chapters about Veeck's ownership of the St. Louis Browns and baseball's fight about its disposition are alone worth the price of the book. I'd give the book five stars because it is well written and entertaining, but I suspect some of his stories are embellished in his favor. But you have to expect that in any autobiography. So many of today's ideas have Veeck written all over them, most notably interleague play and exploding scoreboards. One final note: keep a baseball encyclodedia next to you when you read this one. It comes in handy when the obscure names come flying, and if you feel "ole Willie" is telling a tall one.

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