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Baseball Between the Lines: Baseball in the Forties and Fifties As Told by the Men Who Played It

Baseball Between the Lines: Baseball in the Forties and Fifties As Told by the Men Who Played It

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The logical batterymate to Honig's classic Baseball When the Grass Was Real--the oral history of the national pastime from World War I to World War II--Baseball Between the Lines captures the voice of the game through the men who played it in the 1940s and 1950s. Once again, Honig, through his tape recorder, has assembled a colorful roster of former stars as skilled with anecdotes as they were on the field. Tommy Heinrich, Kirby Higbe, Ralph Kiner, Herb Score, Monte Irvin, Robin Roberts, and Enos Slaughter are among the best of those who throw their memories around for us to catch.

How much has the game changed through the years? Slaughter, the Cardinals' Hall of Fame outfielder, makes sense where today's players tend to make dollars. "Money? Never crossed my mind," he says. "I just wanted to play baseball. I signed a contract calling for $75 a month that first year. Coming off the farm, that looked like great money....The important thing was that I was getting the opportunity to play professional baseball."

Slaughter, of course, went on through a lengthy career to make the most of that opportunity. Honig, too, makes the most of his. "There is hardly a page," writes the immortal sports columnist Red Smith in his introduction, "that doesn't bring back memories." Like a great hunter of reminiscences, Honig has a knack for bringing 'em back alive; these memories become shared--and forever new--simply by their preservation. --Jeff Silverman

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