Don't Look Back: Satchel Paige in the Shadows of Baseball

$44.99
by Mark Ribowsky

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The first complete chronicle of the life of Satchel Paige, the first Negro League star inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame, vividly portrays the great pitcher and his times, offering a colorful look at the man behind the legends. 25,000 first printing. Satchel Paige once said that all he had to do to get his arm in shape to pitch was shake hands with the catcher. Like most of Paige's oft-quoted public statements, this one reflects both self-promotion and folk wisdom. While Ribowsky does set the record straight, where possible, as to the facts of Paige's life and baseball career, he wisely recognizes that Ol' Satch really was as close as this century has come to a mythic figure. His phenomenal longevity as a baseball pitcher--first in the Negro Leagues in the twenties and then, finally, in the integrated major leagues, beginning in 1948 at age 42 (more or less)--stands as one of the most remarkable athletic feats in history, especially when the sheer durability of Paige's arm is combined with its effectiveness. Nobody knows for sure just how many games Paige won (he claimed 2,000), but we do know he was 31-4 with the Pittsburgh Crawfords in 1931, pitching 62 consecutive scoreless innings and winning 21 games in a row. Even more amazing than the statistics, though, was the man himself: "the first free agent with an attitude," Paige was a free-living, high-stepping superstar decades before the term was coined. He was also a bitter black man who used the Stepinfetchit image to his advantage in his later years but who never lost a "dissonant anger about being shafted" by the white baseball establishment. Placing Paige's incredible story in the context of the equally fascinating history of black baseball, Ribowsky has created a marvelous piece of Americana and resurrected a genuine American hero--part Babe Ruth, part Will Rogers, but, finally, beyond comparison. Bill Ott An unsentimentally revealing biography of the legendary black pitcher, and a history of the catch-as-catch-can Negro leagues where he first flourished. Drawing on a variety of sources, Ribowsky (He's A Rebel, Slick) does a fine job of separating fact from fancy in his tellingly detailed account of the life and times of Leroy Robert (Satchel) Paige (whose nickname derived from a youthful bent for snatching valises from unwary travelers). Born in Mobile, Alabama (circa 1906), Paige polished his diamond talents while incarcerated as an adolescent offender. Released from prison toward the end of 1923, he began an extended career that took him the length and breadth of the US as well as to Latin America's capital cities. In addition to playing the so-called blackball circuit (with Cool Papa Bell, Josh Gibson, Buck Leonard, et al.), the gangly hurler more than held his own on barnstorming tours in head-to-head competition against such white stars as Dizzy Dean, Joe DiMaggio, and Bob Feller. Eventually signed by Bill Veeck's Cleveland Indians, Paige had five respectable seasons in the majors, pitched in a World Series game, and later became the first black inducted into baseball's Hall of Fame. While the public bought Paige's act as a lovable, colorful eccentric with a golden arm, Ribowsky makes clear that his persona masked a decidedly darker side that invariably wore out his welcome wherever he stayed. A compulsive womanizer and hard- drinking night owl (to the end of his days), Paige was a past master at looking out for number one, jumping contracts, and holding out for more money as a proven drawing card. Ribowski's first-rate take on the national pastime brings to vivid life what Paige and his contemporaries accomplished on their Jim Crow field of dreams. (16 pages of b&w photographs--not seen) -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. Used Book in Good Condition

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