The kid: the immortal life of Ted Williams
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Choice Review
Bradlee offers a full portrait of "the kid," from his rough childhood to the odd circumstances surrounding his death. Williams' personal life provides the most interesting fodder for this exhaustive biography. Bradlee reveals Williams's efforts to conceal his Mexican heritage and to appeal a change in his draft status, which made him eligible for service in WW II. Additionally, he details Williams's deep resentment toward the US government for recalling him into service during the Korean War. The author paints an unflinchingly critical portrait of Williams as husband, romantic partner, and father to three children. He draws a connection between Williams's unhappy childhood with two distant parents to his own failings as a parent to Bobby-Jo, Claudia, and John-Henry. As Bradlee shows, Williams's attempts to make amends with his only son facilitated John-Henry's success in controlling most aspects of the ailing slugger's life. Bradlee devotes space to Claudia's passionate defense of her older brother, who died in 2004. But the author closes this engrossing narrative with two apt yet sad conclusions that contradict Claudia's defense: John-Henry "plainly exploited his father," and Williams "reaped what he sowed as a father." Summing Up: Recommended. General readers. C. M. Smith Cabrini College
Publisher's Weekly Review
The story of Ted Williams contains more twists and turns than the great American novel, and in this epic biography, former Boston Globe editor and investigative reporter Bradlee presents an often disturbing portrayal of the man perpetually known as "The Kid." The first major book about Williams since Leigh Montville's Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero published within two years of the 2002 death of baseball's greatest hitter at age 83, Bradlee focuses on elements of the Hall of Famer's life overshadowed by his still-historic .406 batting average in 1941, including his two wartime stints in the military at the height of his playing career, cantankerous relationships with fans and journalists, and the sad end-of-life saga perpetuated by his three reproachable children that concluded with the controversial cryonic preservation of Williams's head and decapitated body at a nondescript facility in Scottsdale, Ariz. Drawing on more than 10 years of research and 600-plus interviews, Bradlee explores Williams's Hispanic heritage and troubled childhood that left him feeling "ashamed," provides possible reasons for his irrational anger, and offers new insight into the cryonics case. Despite a few extraneous chapters, this big book rewards patient readers with as complete a portrait of Williams as history likely will allow. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Book Review
Sprawling, entertaining life of the baseball great, renowned as a sports hero while leading a life as checkered as Babe Ruth's or Ty Cobb's. "My name is Ted Fuckin' Williams and I'm the greatest hitter in baseball." So recited Williams, by Boston Globe editor Bradlee's account, as a mantra before each game, "interrupting it only occasionally to offer a lecture on the finer points of hitting to anyone who cared to listen." He had the credentials to deliver such lectures, of course; Bradlee does indeed acknowledge him as "the greatest hitter who ever lived," and few in baseball have bettered Williams' numbers. Like Ruth, Williams was a bruiser with a chip on his shoulder; like Cobb, race was his bte noire, for, as Bradlee reveals, Williams had a Mexican mother and took great pains to conceal that ancestry, both fearful of discrimination and perhaps with an element of self-loathing. Williams had a reputation as a military hero as well, which he did nothing to gainsay, even if he did his best to stay out of the draft in World War II and resisted his reactivation during the Korean War. Williams ended life with a bit of sideways fame as well, having been decapitated and frozen after death in a cryonics venture that did not end well; Bradlee's description of the macabre proceedings is not for the faint of heart. The author dishes plenty--one of the kindest things he says about Williams as a human being was that he was "self-absorbed"--but the repeated demonstrations of flawed character do nothing to diminish Williams' outsized stature as a player. Bradlee is as enthusiastic as Vin Scully or Harry Caray when it comes to describing Williams on the field: "He allowed three hits, one run, walked none, and struck out Rudy York on three pitches. The move seemed an attemptto placate angry fans with some pure entertainment in one of the worst losses of the year." An outstanding addition to the literature of baseball.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Reviews
On leave from 25 distinguished years as a reporter and then deputy managing editor at the Boston Globe, Bradlee gives us a biography of Ted Williams, the best hitter in baseball history. Great expectations.
[Page 55]. (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Publishers Weekly Reviews
The story of Ted Williams contains more twists and turns than the great American novel, and in this epic biography, former Boston Globe editor and investigative reporter Bradlee presents an often disturbing portrayal of the man perpetually known as "The Kid." The first major book about Williams since Leigh Montville's Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero published within two years of the 2002 death of baseball's greatest hitter at age 83, Bradlee focuses on elements of the Hall of Famer's life overshadowed by his still-historic .406 batting average in 1941, including his two wartime stints in the military at the height of his playing career, cantankerous relationships with fans and journalists, and the sad end-of-life saga perpetuated by his three reproachable children that concluded with the controversial cryonic preservation of Williams's head and decapitated body at a nondescript facility in Scottsdale, Ariz. Drawing on more than 10 years of research and 600-plus interviews, Bradlee explores Williams's Hispanic heritage and troubled childhood that left him feeling "ashamed," provides possible reasons for his irrational anger, and offers new insight into the cryonics case. Despite a few extraneous chapters, this big book rewards patient readers with as complete a portrait of Williams as history likely will allow. (Dec.)
[Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLCPW Annex Reviews
The story of Ted Williams contains more twists and turns than the great American novel, and in this epic biography, former Boston Globe editor and investigative reporter Bradlee presents an often disturbing portrayal of the man perpetually known as "The Kid." The first major book about Williams since Leigh Montville's Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero published within two years of the 2002 death of baseball's greatest hitter at age 83, Bradlee focuses on elements of the Hall of Famer's life overshadowed by his still-historic .406 batting average in 1941, including his two wartime stints in the military at the height of his playing career, cantankerous relationships with fans and journalists, and the sad end-of-life saga perpetuated by his three reproachable children that concluded with the controversial cryonic preservation of Williams's head and decapitated body at a nondescript facility in Scottsdale, Ariz. Drawing on more than 10 years of research and 600-plus interviews, Bradlee explores Williams's Hispanic heritage and troubled childhood that left him feeling "ashamed," provides possible reasons for his irrational anger, and offers new insight into the cryonics case. Despite a few extraneous chapters, this big book rewards patient readers with as complete a portrait of Williams as history likely will allow. (Dec.)
[Page ]. Copyright 2014 PWxyz LLC