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The Last Real Season
Mike Shropshire
其他書名
A Hilarious Look Back at 1975 - When Major Leaguers Made Peanuts, the Umpires Wore Red, and Billy Martin Terrorized Everyone
出版
Hachette UK
, 2008-05-14
主題
Sports & Recreation / Baseball / History
Humor / Topic / History
Sports & Recreation / Baseball / Essays & Writings
ISBN
0446537098
9780446537094
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=SRw2AQAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
A rollicking and ribald first-person account of the 1975 Major League Baseball season—the last year before free agency took over and changed the national pastime forever—for better or for worse!
There are baseball books and there are baseball books.
But for the baseball cognoscenti, there are just a few "must-have" classics:
Ball Four
by Jim Bouton.
The Long Season
by Jim Brosnan.
Willie's Time
by Charles Einstein. And
Seasons In Hell
by Mike Shropshire, which was a hilarous first-person account of Mike's travails serving as a daily beat writer covering the hapless 1972 Texas Rangers.
Now, in
The Last Real Season
, Shropshire captures the essence of a different time and different place in baseball, when the average salary for major leaguers was only $27,600...when the ballplayers' drug of choice was alcohol, not steroids...when major leaguers sported tight doubleknit uniforms over their long-hair and Afros...and on July 28th, 1975, the day that famed Detroit resident Jimmy Hoffa went missing, the Detroit Tigers started a losing streak of 19 games in a row. On the day that the Tigers blew a 4-run lead in the bottom of the ninth, Shropshire recalls: "I drank three bottles of Stroh's beer in less than a minute and wrote that 'Jimmy Hoffa will show up in the left field stands with Amelia Earhart as his date before the Tigers will win another game.'"
And so it goes. Filled with just the kind of wonderful baseball stories that real fans crave, this is the funniest baseball book of the year.