Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » History » Red Sox Century : Limited Edition  
Categories
Books
Magazines

Red Sox Century : Limited Edition

Authors: Richard A. Johnson, Glenn Stout, Richard Johnson
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
Category: Book

Buy Used: $95.73



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 19 reviews
Sales Rank: 5281472

Media: Hardcover
Edition: Limited
Pages: 480
Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.8
Dimensions (in): 11.5 x 9.5 x 1.5

ISBN: 0618094547
Dewey Decimal Number: 796
EAN: 9780618094547
ASIN: 0618094547

Publication Date: October 12, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Excellent customer service. Order inquiries handled promptly.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Red Sox Century
  • Paperback - Red Sox Century
  • Hardcover - Red Sox Century: The Definitive History of Baseball's Most Storied Franchise, Expanded and Updated
  • Paperback - Red Sox Century: The Definitive History of Baseball's Most Storied Franchise, Expanded and Updated

Similar Items:

  • Fenway: A Biography in Words and Pictures
  • Red Sox Nation: An Unexpurgated History Of The Red Sox
  • The Red Sox Fan Handbook: Everything You Need to Know to be a Red Sox Fan or to Marry One
  • Blood Feud: The Red Sox, the Yankees, and the Struggle of Good versus Evil
  • 101 Reasons to Love the Red Sox

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Oh, to be a Red Sox fan. It is a mark of the singular angst that attends the territory that the four retired numbers--9 (Ted Williams), 4 (Joe Cronin), 1 (Bobby Doerr), and 8 (Carl Yastrzemski)--taunt the faithful every game from their perch on Fenway's right-field facade; they precisely correspond to the date--September 4, 1918--that the Sox won their last World Series title. Less than two years later, owner Harry Frazee would sell his star pitcher and outfielder, Babe Ruth, to the Yankees, and the curse of the Bambino would take hold of Boston hearts.

From Cy Young to Cy Young award winner Pedro Martinez, this is a franchise full of myth and history--the first to win a World Series and the last to cross the color line--and, contend authors Glenn Stout, the series editor of the annual Best American Sportswriting volume, and Richard A. Johnson, curator of the Sports Museum of New England, the most interesting franchise in the history of the game. Their splendid, fully illustrated chronicle, rich with anecdotes, of the club from 1901 to the present makes it hard to argue with the assessment. The Sox have always been interesting--as well as frustrating, enigmatic, contradictory, and thrilling, and Red Sox Century touches all of those bases. This is an exhaustively researched history, but it's also a fan's book, filled with affection and exasperation. Stout and Johnson effectively pepper their narrative with personal reflections and observations from writers such as Peter Gammons, Dan Shaughnessy, and Elizabeth Dooley. They also pick a Red Sox all-century team, make a fine case for Pedro's '99 season as the best ever for a pitcher, compile some requisite stats, and assemble the most complete Sox bibliography ever. About the only thing they don't supply is a good parking place near Fenway. --Jeff Silverman

Product Description
In the year 2001, the Red Sox will celebrate one hundred years of baseball in Boston. In no other city, in no other sport, has there been a team that has enjoyed such a loyal following and yet has broken more hearts. This is the Red Sox story in its entirety, much of it never before told ? from the team's inception, orchestrated by baseball czar Ban Johnson, and its early peak in 1918, with its fifth and LAST World Series win; through the glory years, which saw the rise of such greats as Cy Young, Babe Ruth, Teddy Ballgame, and Yaz, and which witnessed the "Impossible Dream" of 1967 and near-misses in 1975 and 1986; to the present, when the Sox are still chasing the world championship that their fabled destiny seems not to want them to have. In these pages, many a Red Sox myth is debunked, and many stories are told for the first time.

Did the Red Sox fix the first World Series game ever played?
What is the truth about Babe Ruth and Harry Frazee?
Did Johnny Pesky hold the ball?
Does Fenway Park have a future?
Will the Red Sox ever win a World Series again?

Drawn from countless interviews and tireless research and illustrated with more than two hundred photographs, RED SOX CENTURY is far more than a picture book. It is a comprehensive and always colorful history of a team that helped to define not only its city but its sport.



Customer Reviews:   Read 14 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Terribly Pro-NY/Frazee   October 9, 2008
I received Red Sox Century expecting a comprehensive, fair look at the tumultuous history of my favorite team. Instead, I received a book written by New Yorkers, ostensibly for New Yorkers. The chapter on Harry Frazee and the sale of Ruth manages to fail in a completely unique way: by somehow ignoring Frazee's destruction of the Red Sox.

The writers continually gloss over the ramifications of the deals, failing to explain how poorly they turned out for his own team. In an objective book, I'd imagine the trade of one of the best hitting catchers in baseball and a 20 year old future hall of famer for 4 journeyman would merit a mention. Not so here.

Any baseball book that passes off honest criticism as anti-semitism is not worth getting. Save your money.



1 out of 5 stars You can judge a book by its cover   March 18, 2004
 1 out of 26 found this review helpful

Any questions. What a bitter disappointment. If you are a novice baseball fan and just want this as a decorative piece, if fails you there too, with quite possibly the worst baseball book cover ever. Save your money and your time...If you MUST purchase this book mine is for sale on Ebay, no reserve!

Jeff
Boston, MA


5 out of 5 stars The best and most complete history of Red Sox baseball   November 28, 2003
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

The writing is superb, attention to detail inspiring. If you're a Red Sox fan, you need to read this book.


5 out of 5 stars Extraordinary   May 16, 2003
 3 out of 3 found this review helpful

After living overseas for much of the last decade, I somehow missed this. But the book was mentioned quite prominently in Halberstam's excellent new book, The Teammates, so I sought it out. This is a rare book that combines research as rigorous as that of any academic with fine writing making it eminently readable, illustrated by pictures that help move the story along rather than just fill up space. I had always fancied myself as more knowledgeable than most Red Sox fans, but this book has humbled me. An absolute must for Sox fanatics.


5 out of 5 stars Fact vs Fiction   May 7, 2003
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is THE definitive Red Sox history. It tells the whole story just as it happened. Of course, for Red Sox fans that is both good and bad. If you want a happier ending, read Bill Lee's The Little Red Sox Book, which changes Red Sox history and provides dozens of happy endings, including Ted Williams killing Hitler with a line drive, Babe staying in Boston and Jackie Robinson joining the Red Sox. I suggest you read them both...one to put you out on the ledge and the other to coax you back in.

Franchise Books
Franchise Menu
Franchises Home
Franchise Supplies
Free Consultation
Franchise Forums
Franchise Opportunities
Franchise Articles
Franchise Buying Guide
Franchising Laws
Franchising Partners
Franchise Blog