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The Boys of October: How the 1975 Boston Red Sox Embodied Baseball's Ideals and Restored Our Spirits
 
 
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The Boys of October: How the 1975 Boston Red Sox Embodied Baseball's Ideals and Restored Our Spirits [Hardcover]

Doug Hornig


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...a replay of another sort, a psalm, really, to the '75 Red Sox...transcend[s] the box-score mentality of so much sportswriting...captures the true joy of baseball...very fine. -- New York Times Book Review --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

This title provides an inspiring look at the underdog heroes of the "1975 World Series". In the fall of 1975, the country was mired in the aftereffects of the war in Vietnam, economic distress, and lingering political turmoil from the Watergate scandal. Amid these trying times, Americans were desperate for some kind of diversion - anything to take their minds away from the harsh news of the day.That diversion arrived in the form of an unforgettable Fall Classic that truly would live up to its name. In his lyrical prose, lifelong Boston Red Sox fan Doug Hornig takes readers back to that exhilarating autumn in 1975, when Carl Yastrzemski, Carlton Fisk, Luis Tiant, and the ragtag Boys from Beantown faced Cincinnati's Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench, and the rest of the indomitable "Big Red Machine" in an epic seven-game struggle that is still widely regarded as the greatest ever played. Doug Hornig was there - with his favorite uncle, Oscar, by his side, a man old enough to dimly recall the last time the Sox won a Series, back in 1918. Together, in the stands at cozy Fenway or in front of a snowy black-and-white TV, they watched and waited and prayed.In the end, the Curse of the Bambino struck again, but not before the Red Sox gave us one hell of a show. For twelve wonderful days, Americans were able to put aside their more serious concerns and lose themselves in the drama unfolding on two small fields of green. As the author so eloquently puts it, "For that lovely, long October moment, we became as children once again. And that is a gift of incalculable value." Years later, moved by memories of that incomparable series, Hornig set out to meet and interview the members of the 1975 Boston Red Sox, a cast of characters that included party animals and pot smokers, with nicknames like Pudge and Yaz, Carbs and Willow, Senor and the Spaceman.Those candid conversations - Luis Tiant talking pitching in a motel coffee shop, "Spaceman" Bill Lee discussing philosophy at his rural hippie hideaway - are all here, skillfully woven together with a moving memoir and an exciting play-by-play of the triumphs and tribulations of that October classic: from "El Tiante"'s Game 1 shutout to Fisk's historic winning homer in the wee hours of Game 6 and the nail-biting finale, decided by a single, heart-stopping run. Through it all, the underdog Red Sox embodied the spirit of the game, in victory and defeat, to give us the Series we needed--and one we'll never forget.Against the backdrop of one of American society's low points, "The Boys of October" celebrates baseball and the heroes who made it what it is. Doug Hornig has published seven suspense novels, one of which was nominated for an Edgar. He has also written articles for such publications as "Playboy", "BusinessWeek", "The Writer", and "Gadfly". A native New Englander, he still follows the Sox from his home in Afton, Virginia. ""The 1975 World Series" changed the way Americans felt about baseball. Watching these games was like blowing the dust off a favorite book and reading it for the first time in twenty years." - Boston sportswriter Dan Shaughnessy. "I have had no time to mourn the boys of October. Doug Hornig's book for me is reconciliation with my nemesis and my ghosts. It can be read now! Mea culpa! Mea culpa!" - Bill Lee.They say that baseball is about going home. In this elegant meditation on an unforgettable Fall Classic, lifelong Red Sox fan Doug Hornig goes home to find the heroes who made the "1975 World Series" a sports masterpiece. Skillfully weaving together first-person interviews with members of the '75 Sox, an exciting play-by-play of the Series' most memorable moments, and a moving memoir of the author's relationship with his favorite uncle - a retired ballplayer himself - Hornig brings us back with him to the cobblestoned streets of Boston in a time when the country was still reeling from the turmoil of war, economic crisis, and political disillusionment. Although 1975 was not a very good year, it did give us some phenomenal baseball and a team that, even in loss, embodied the American spirit in its perseverance and sheer courage, teaching us lessons that continue to reverberate with meaning today.

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First Sentence
Back in September of '75, if devoid of good fortune in most areas of my life, I was at least lucky with regard to the World Series. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Amazon.com:  10 reviews
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful
So-So Overview 10 July 2003
By Eric Paddon - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is a competent, but not stellar overview of the 75 World Series. The problem is that it is not told from the standpoint of an objective chronicle of why this was such a great World Series, it is told from the narrow perspective of one fan, who feels the need to indulge in his narrower perspectives about things that have nothing to do with the subject I want to be reading about. I can put up with an overview from a Red Sox fan's perspective, but do I really have to read his tiresome (and for me personally offensive) digressions about Cold War politics? Or is this kind of arrogance that assumes I'm going to nod in agreement with his asinine remarks about Fidel Castro just so endemic to political liberals who write about baseball?

Enough of that rant though. I really can not fathom why the author can't do something as simple as provide a little background context to this World Series. There is no mention of Boston's drive to the pennant that season in terms of how they did it, and nothing about their stunning upset of Oakland (three time defending champions) in the LCS. Instead, the author just starts with the World Series and breaks down the games so narrowly, which ordinarily would be a nice thing to do, but the absence of some background in his earlier chapters explaining how we got to this point ends up creating a pretty poor narrative overall. The author in a sense expects us to be familiar already with the 75 World Series and the season that led to us, hence his justification for dumping us in the middle of a story with not enough perspective on how we got there in the first place. Without the smarmy political asides we would still have a book that aspires to be definitive, but in the end can be no better than a supplement.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A quick read, but lacking depth 3 July 2003
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
The author is too passionate about the Red Sox to write an objective review of the great '75 Series. And the interviews he does manage to get from participants lack depth. I often felt, which the author admits, that he was watching the games on videotape and writing about what he saw. The title pulled me in, and i was disappointed.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
A quick read, but lacking depth 3 July 2003
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
The author is too passionate about the Red Sox to write an objective review of the great '75 Series. And the interviews he does manage to get from participants lack depth. I often felt, which the author admits, that he was watching the games on videotape and writing about what he saw. The title pulled me in, and i was disappointed.

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