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Sosa : An Autobiography

Sosa : An Autobiography

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great player, so-so storyteller
Review: A quick and pleasant read (REAL quick if you skip the stats that comprise about thirty percent of the text). Autobiographies seem to fall into three categories: (1) "tell it all before someone else tells on you" (Billie Holiday's LADY SINGS THE BLUES), (2) "getting even with one's enemies" (Nancy Reagan's MY TURN), and (3) "Gee, I can't believe people pay me to do what I love" (Xaviera Hollander's THE HAPPY HOOKER).

Cynically, you could say there's a fourth category--the market-driven, "strike while the iron is hot" autobiography. Sosa's book probably falls into this last category, though it is presented as a "Gee, I can't believe it" type (but with touches of the defensiveness found in "getting even" types of autobiographies). Hispanic journalist Breton had done a good job of interviewing people in Sosa's life and arranging testimonials in a way that keeps Sosa's story moving. Baseball fans will probably enjoy reading what Sosa has to say about how he improved his batting technique, how he handled the disappointment of being sent back to the minor league, how he viewed his home-run competition with Mark McGwire in 1998. Young people looking for a sports hero will benefit from what Sosa ("Mikey" to his friends and family) has to say about loyalty to family, remembering where one comes from, learning from ones mistakes, handling gossipers and nay-sayers, believing in oneself, and giving back to one's community. People looking for a profound psychological portrait of the author or an insightful take on the business and game of baseball will be disappointed. While no-one would expect someone as guileless as Sosa to trash his teammates and fellow ballplayers, the book could have used a few more clubhouse anecdotes.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: sosa
Review: Sammy Sosa is arguably the greatest Latino player in major league baseball. His magnificent 1998 home run race with Mark McGwire captivated the nation. Afterwards he was invited to the White House and made a special Ambassador to his native country, the Dominican Republic. However, what few people know is how hard Sammy Sosa worked to reach stardom.

"Sosa an Autogiography," is a special story. In fact, it is inspiring. Sammy Sosa grew up poor. He was skinny and initially wanted to be a boxer. However, his talent for baseball came out from urging of his older brother and the support of his devoted mother.

Co-author Marcos Bretón details the early years of Sosa's early major league career in Texas and then with the Chicago White Sox. It was a difficult time for Sosa, going up and down from the major and minor leagues. Nevertheless, Sosa worked hard and never lost hope. The trade to the Cubs and his rise to stardom was the result of a strong dedication to excellence.

Perhaps, the greatest part of this book is Sosa's loyalty to his family, the people of the Dominican Republic, and the fans of the Chicago Cubs. Although Sosa has reached great heights he still wants the fame that is associated with winning the World Series. This is a great book for kids and adults alike...the bottom line is "hard work works."

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Latino Hero
Review: Sammy Sosa is arguably the greatest Latino player in major league baseball. His magnificent 1998 home run race with Mark McGwire captivated the nation. Afterwards he was invited to the White House and made a special Ambassador to his native country, the Dominican Republic. However, what few people know is how hard Sammy Sosa worked to reach stardom.

"Sosa an Autogiography," is a special story. In fact, it is inspiring. Sammy Sosa grew up poor. He was skinny and initially wanted to be a boxer. However, his talent for baseball came out from urging of his older brother and the support of his devoted mother.

Co-author Marcos Bretón details the early years of Sosa's early major league career in Texas and then with the Chicago White Sox. It was a difficult time for Sosa, going up and down from the major and minor leagues. Nevertheless, Sosa worked hard and never lost hope. The trade to the Cubs and his rise to stardom was the result of a strong dedication to excellence.

Perhaps, the greatest part of this book is Sosa's loyalty to his family, the people of the Dominican Republic, and the fans of the Chicago Cubs. Although Sosa has reached great heights he still wants the fame that is associated with winning the World Series. This is a great book for kids and adults alike...the bottom line is "hard work works."

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A NICE LOOK AT A GOOD GUY
Review: Sammy Sosa is not a robot. He, like you and me, is a fallible human being who is largely the product of his upbringing. In "Sosa: An Autobiography," readers have the opportunity to gain insights into not only Sammy Sosa and professional baseball, but the larger American culture and each of us. A superficial read of this book may leave some wanting more. And certainly there is more to tell. But Sammy's smart enough to know there's a time and there's a place. This book, at this time, is neither.

But to those who recognize the implications, there is plenty of meat: (1) Has baseball exploited Latin players? What should baseball be doing differently for them? (2) Should all players on a team -- all people in any organization -- be treated the same despite their different personalities, their different backgrounds, their different perceptions? (3) What is the value of trust, respect, fairness, honesty, loyalty?

Speaking as someone who spent five years as a Major League scout and 2O years coaching baseball, on a more baseball specific level, how can someone like Walt Hriniak be a Major League hitting coach and try to force everyone -- Sammy Sosa and Ozzie Guillen -- to hit the same way? Someone like that shouldn't be coaching baseball at ANY level. Why aren't all Major League coaches and managers as insightful as Cubs' hitting coach Jeff Pentland? As any excellent teacher or coach knows, whether you're teaching Shakespeare or the circle change, you're not teaching a curriculum, you're teaching people.

Reading Sammy's story allows the intelligent reader to see that Major League baseball is as political as Congress and just about as effective in dealing with real people. Sammy demonstrates that lack of trust and lack of respect will destroy any relationship, any organization. But mutual trust and respect will allow any relationship, any organization to thrive.

If you want everything spelled out for you, buy a dictionary. If you want something to think about, buy "Sosa: An Autobiography."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I could not put it down
Review: Sammy Sosa writes in his autobiography as he lives his life - open, honest, funny, and very likeable. I was inspired by this book, by his sheer persistance to succeed, but in a very nice way. Sammy's love for his mother is the theme which holds his life together.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A NICE LOOK AT A GOOD GUY
Review: SOSA IS A BOOK ABOUT ONE OF GREATEST THE RAGS TO RICHES STORIES IN RECENT YEARS. SAMMY DOES A GOOD JOB TELLING OF HIS LIFE IN DOMINICAN REPUBLIC AS A CHILD AND TEENAGER. HE THEN GETS INTO HIS TREMENDOUS RISE TO ONE OF THE MOST FEARED SLUGGERS IN THE GAME TODAY. I ADMIRE HIS MODESTY, VALUES, CONFIDENCE, AND INNOCENCE. HIS LOVE FOR HIS MOTHER IS TRULY ADMIRABLE. SAMMY IS TRULY A GOOD PERSON AND A GREAT PLAYER. SAMMY HAS MANY VALUES AND BELIEFS THAT ARE TRULY NEEDED BY MOST OF TODAYS ATHLETES. SAMMY IS TRULY A BREATH OF FRESH AIR IN HIS ENTHUSIASM AND LOVE OF THE GAME. THE BOY IN SAMMY IS ALIVE AND KICKING. I ADMIRE SAMMY A LOT MORE NOW THAT I HAVE READ THIS BOOK. A MUST READ FOR ALL BASBALL FANS AND FOR PEOPLE WHO NEED SOME GRATITUDE AND HUMILITY IN THEIR LIFE.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fun read on an interesting baseball icon.
Review: Sosa: An Autobiography takes us to Sammy Sosa's hometown, where we learn how he became one of the greatest baseball players of our time. It is filled with rich details and facts about Sosa's maturing into the ballplayer he is today.

Author Marcos Breton gives the reader details never known before about Sosa, and keeps the reader wanting more as the book goes on. It is a quick read.

The book is much like Breton's previous book, Away Games, about Oakland A's shortstop Miguel Tejada, and other Latin baseball players. If you like Away Games, you'll enjoy Sosa's autobiography.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: sosa
Review: The book I read was Sosa and it was great.It was all about sammy Sosa and I think they did great job on an autobiography about him and telling what Sammy Sosa was like when he was a little guy,growing up. A professional athlete,it was amazing how he was a little kid to an adult. He is a great and this book was excellent. I also liked the pictures and the information that they have. I would recommend this book to others.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A lovely, inspiring little book about a Big Man in Baseball.
Review: The subtitle of this book is "an Autobiography." Yet in the last pages, in the last sentence of the "Author's Note," it says that "All interviews with Sammy Sosa were conducted in Spanish and translated into English." So what we really have here is a book with the inherent pro-subject slant of any AUTObiography coupled with the biases and outlook of the true author, Marcos Bret`on. A lot of time is spent detailing the claimed biases against what they (Sammy and/or the author) call "Latin players" by which they mean any ball player coming from outside the USA (they include Puerto Ricans in this group) who speaks Spanish as his first language.

Breton concludes that: "Sosa became a living antidote to baseball's recent poisonous past, in particular the 1994 baseball strike that canceled the World Series. And in the process, Sosa developed an appeal that extended beyond his sport." "Plainly stated, Sosa sells in Peoria, and everywhere else."

This book recounts a modern Horatio Alger tale: Sammy's impoverished origins in the Dominican Republic to the American icon he is today. The chronological narrative is carried along in many voices: Sammy/Breton, Sammy's friends, mentors, relatives, and coaches. Sammy and all his brothers and sisters grew up in "a one-bedroom house with dirt floors and no indoor plumbing." ... and he would "practice on my street by hitting dried husks of maize again and again." "So many Dominican prospects like Sammy are malnourished by the time they reach their teens that they haven't developed physically yet."

"Asked early in 2000 about his biggest regret, Texas Governor and presidential hopeful George W. Bush - formerly managing partner of the Texas Rangers - said "My biggest mistake was trading Sammy Sosa."

The book lets long-suffering Cub fans re-live that magical 1998 season after Sammy first pays proper deference: "That spring of 1998 was a very sad time for all Chicago. Our community lost one of our favorites - my beloved friend Harry Caray. Harry helped me so much. He was such a good person to me. ... he was just one of those special people, and I know he is with God now. We all mourned his loss. And so before the start of the 1998 season, I decided I would dedicate it to him. Every time I hit a homer, I would be hitting it for Harry - and for Mama, of course."

The book concludes with the for-the-Cubs-normal season of 1999. After that, us "maybe next year" Cub stalwarts can all give another listen to Steve Goodman's wry anthem "A Dying Cub Fan's Last Request." [on the No Big Surprise CD.]


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