★ 04/01/2018
During the 1950s, it was a baseball player from a tiny Oklahoma hamlet who transcended America's largest metropolis. In their second collaboration after Blood Brothers, coauthors Roberts (history, Purdue Univ.) and Smith (history, Georgia Inst. of Technology) explore Mickey Mantle's (1931–95) Triple Crown season of 1956, which ensured Mantle's spot in the Parthenon of Yankee greats. This is more than a sports book filled with accolades, as Roberts and Smith use their historical training to frame how Mantle fits within the transformation of the American cities and the rise of mass marketing during the 1950s. This cultural context adds deeper understanding to the myths surrounding the sports star. Further, the authors show the dark undertows of the myth by investigating Mantle's personal choices. But those demons do not overshadow his historic season. Also highlighted are Mantle's competitors for the Triple Crown Al Kaline and Ted Williams, along with the Yankees redemptive victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers in the World Series. VERDICT Highly recommended for fans of sports, Americana, and those seeking an informative historical read.—Jacob Sherman, John Peace Lib., Univ. of Texas at San Antonio
12/18/2017
Historians Roberts and Smith (Blood Brothers) detail the defining season of legendary New York Yankee Mickey Mantle: 1956, during which Mantle threatened to break Babe Ruth’s single-season record of 60 home runs. The authors tell the story of Mantle: his youth in rural Oklahoma, his early years of frustration and injuries after joining the Yankees in 1951, and the 1956 World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers during which he displayed his defensive as well as offensive skills. From here, the authors weave Mantle into a much larger cultural tapestry, explaining how Mantle’s “emergence as an icon was a product of a particular moment when the country confronted the Cold War and baseball confronted an array of problems.” They argue that Mantle’s athletic prowess was used by baseball professionals, writers, and fans to maintain the game’s image as a wholesome sport during a perceived rise in juvenile delinquency and massive social change, as America was suburbanized and men who had returned from war saw women in the workplace as a threat against “traditional masculinity.” Against this backdrop, the authors write, “Mantle’s ascendance occurred at a time when Americans revered traditional masculine vigor and rugged individualism.” This is a rich, detailed exploration of the Mantle legend. (Mar.)
"Anyone who loves the sport will find hours of undiluted joy in one of the best books on baseballor any other sportthat I have encountered."—Washington Times
"It is not hard to believe that if Mickey Mantle had been healthy and took better care of his body, he would probably be remembered as the best baseball player ever. This excellent book proves why."—Ken Burns
"Mickey Mantle was a genuinely great baseball player. But at his very best, he was among the greatest of the great. A Season in the Sun vividly illuminates the Mickey Mantle of 1956, when he was at his very best." —Bob Costas, NBC Sports
"[Roberts and Smith] masterfully spin a narrative that places Mantle and his trials as a microcosm of America during the evolving decade... A Season in the Sun is a must-read for not just any baseball fan, but anyone interested in the peculiarities of postwar American culture."—Off the Bench
"A Season In The Sun paints the picture of about what New York, America, and baseball was like in the 1950s, a treasure trove of information that is a must read for Yankee fans and admirers of Number 7."—Brooklyn Digest
"A brisk account of a career and a culture that presages much of our current-day obsession with celebrity." —Kirkus Reviews
"Highly recommended for fans of sports, Americana, and those seeking an informative historical read."—Library Journal, starred review
"This is a rich, detailed exploration of the Mantle legend." —Publishers Weekly
"I loved A Season in the Sun. This compelling book on Mickey Mantle at his greatest and most vulnerable illuminates history and shatters myths at the same time." —David Maraniss, author of Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball's Last Hero
"Sex, booze, and an epic home-run race with a ghost: 1956 was a raucous year in baseball, richly recounted here.... A Season in the Sun is a shimmering snow globe of a game and a time gone by." —John Thorn, official historian, Major League Baseball
"A Season in the Sun is the best book on Mickey Mantle that I've read by some margin.... Randy Roberts and Johnny Smith stitch together not only a damn good baseball storyI found the game-by-game arc very compellingbut also link Mantle to his times in a way that really makes the book stand out. It's informative, thoughtful, and without being hokey or hagiographic, it is almost a love letter to a lost and often misunderstood period of baseball history." —Nathan Corzine, author of Team Chemistry: The History of Drugs and Alcohol in Major League Baseball
"From the title to its protagonist, A Season in the Sun is baseball: thrilling, heroic, enduring. Mickey Mantle and his times return to us flawed yet still fabulous. Even 60 years later, some stories are so good, they never get old."—Howard Bryant, author of The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron
Every baseball fan dreams of witnessing greatness. In 1956, Mickey Mantle gave fans one of the greatest seasons in the history of MLB. Though Pete Larkin is well known for his narrating talent, it’s his experience as an MLB announcer and his love of the game that make him ideal to deliver this audiobook. He brings the enthusiasm of a devoted fan as he recounts that magical season with the exhilaration and breathlessness of chasing history. Listeners will be captivated as they hear about Mantle’s extraordinary season in a bygone era when kings ruled the diamond and baseball ruled America. T.D. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
Every baseball fan dreams of witnessing greatness. In 1956, Mickey Mantle gave fans one of the greatest seasons in the history of MLB. Though Pete Larkin is well known for his narrating talent, it’s his experience as an MLB announcer and his love of the game that make him ideal to deliver this audiobook. He brings the enthusiasm of a devoted fan as he recounts that magical season with the exhilaration and breathlessness of chasing history. Listeners will be captivated as they hear about Mantle’s extraordinary season in a bygone era when kings ruled the diamond and baseball ruled America. T.D. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
2017-12-12
Roberts (History/Purdue Univ.) and Smith (American History/Georgia Tech Univ.) follow their previous collaboration (Blood Brothers: The Fatal Friendship Between Muhammad Ali and Malcolm X, 2016) with a hybrid book about baseball legend Mickey Mantle (1931-1995).The hybrid consists of a spotty biography of Mantle's journey from small-town Oklahoma to the New York Yankees, a deep dive into the nature of American-style celebrity, and fascinating cameos by the men and women who influenced the impressionable Mantle as he rose to fame. The authors suggest that the task of upholding Yankee hegemony while being compared to Babe Ruth and Joe DiMaggio placed unbearable pressures on the 20-something Mantle. Predisposed to late-night partying and excessive alcohol consumption, Mantle often struggled to report to the baseball diamond. The serious physical injuries wracking his seemingly godlike physique also compromised his ability to reach maximum performance on a regular basis. One year in particular, 1956, was his finest, as Mantle led Major League Baseball in batting average, home runs, and runs batted in—the almost never achieved triple crown. Though the authors recount the 1956 season in detail that might bore those uninterested in baseball history, their narrative of off-field controversies should have no trouble holding the interest of all readers. Most sports journalists and other baseball insiders covered up for the naïve Mantle, feeling that dishonesty by omission served their audiences' desire for hero worship. After 1956, as Mantle's stardom peaked and then declined, revelations about his less-than-sterling behaviors seeped out. The publication of Ball Four (1970), the classic memoir by pitcher Jim Bouton, ended any remaining illusion of Mantle as a golden boy. When Mantle died relatively young in 1995, few who knew the real Mantle expressed shock.A brisk account of a career and a culture that presages much of our current-day obsession with celebrity.