Reviews

Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend by Larry Tye

vivamonty's review against another edition

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4.0

Comprehensive, perhaps a bit bloated, but overall a fascinating examination of a man who demonstrated countless times what it means to be larger than life.

jsant's review against another edition

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4.0

Satchel Paige was truly an American legend who lived baseball, loved to tell stories and had the most amazing pitching arm the game has ever seen. More people should know his story.

jdscott50's review against another edition

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5.0

Some of my first books were juvenile sports biographies. When my class would go to the school library, I would pour over the section and read about Franco Harris and Jim Brown (no I am not that old, but the
library was small.) I think my favorite was reading about Franco Harris' Immaculate Reception. These stories are very white-washed of controversy. As in the Harris case, it has been claimed that his reception was illegal, but the referee was not about to tell a screaming capacity crowd of Pittsburgh Steeler fans that they lost the game on his ruling with only half a dozen security guards.

Much of what I have learned about Satchel Paige is in the same regard. It focused on his legendary pitching skills, his sayings, his personality, and his age, but never covered race. This biography of Paige tells the whole story. It also cuts through a great deal of mythology on the pitcher, finding his real age, his first start in Negro baseball, his rotator cuff injury that almost finished his career, and most shockingly, even though baseball was integrated, the Cleveland Indians ball club did not want him on the team and penalized him for problems that were more the fault of Jim Crow than his.

Integration in baseball, like Civil Rights, was not welcome, and those in the league tried to find other methods to push these new players out. Even though many played in the Negro Leagues for so long, it was no guarantee that they would stay in the majors. It is also further shocking that many of these players, when their playing days were over, went to menial jobs like janitors, and were left in poverty and forgotten from history. In fact, it was only Satchel Paige's personality and his timeless arm that prevented the same for him. His stint in the majors was relatively shortlived when compared to his decades playing
baseball. I think that another mythology from the book was his speed. Others in the league were faster, but he was smarter, more accurate, and honed those skills more carefully than others realized. Many
weren't merely blown away, although early on most were, but were outsmarted.

Overall, this is a great biography on Satchel Paige, one of the best I've ever read. It isn't just about Sachel, but cuts through the mythology surrounding him, so we can truly appreciate the amazing man he was, without question.

terynce's review against another edition

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2.0

Too long by half! No organization, no plan. This book read like a young Satchel on the mound only it wouldn't improve like Satchel did.

One of the all time greats, maybe the greatest, and he performed feats that are only borderline believable and larger than life. When he was good, he was unreal. The book was a meandering morass of statistics, quotes, and stories.

Worth a skim if you are a baseball fan, but I won't rate it higher than that. The most interesting part for me was the unintended consequences of Jackie Robinson being called up to MLB. Black fans couldn't watch him play in person and that changed the sense of community they shared.

hunterswanigan's review against another edition

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informative inspiring lighthearted reflective medium-paced

3.0

franklinfantini's review

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5.0

Excellent biography that kept me interested the whole way through. Tons of great stories and covers not only the experience f a baseball player but the experience of baseball when it was segregated.

dickh's review

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3.0

I liked the book very much as it gave a great perspective on Satchel the man. Unfortunately, as with all players in the Negro Leagues, there is a lack of journalistic coverage available to document how truly great these players were. Well worth reading, I would read it along with Mark Ribowsky's biography of Josh Gibson, another great player from this era.
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