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Monday, May 21, 2012

This is magnificent. Appel, a veteran writer and PR person (longtime for the Yankees), manages the near-impossible: a huge, incredibly detailed history of the New York Yankees that never bogs down or spends too long in any one place. The style is as smooth as can be, as Appel moves from the team's murky beginnings in money, politics, and graft and on to Sunday baseball, the Titanic benefit (who knew?), the first Yankee no-hitter, the first World Series win. The Yankees, always conservative, came late to radio, night games, field lighting, and fan promotion. The DH, free agency, the Red Sox rivalry all show up, along with every player you want to remember and some whom fans might not. There were very good years (1927) and bad stretches (1965-75), and Appel rolls right through, chronologically, with a nugget on almost every page: a 17-year-old girl named Jackie Mitchell struck out Ruth and Gehrig on six pitches in an exhibition game in Chattanooga in 1931; no exact transcript exists of Lou Gehrig's luckiest man speech; Yogi Berra comes to spring training every year, and former All-Star Ron Guidry drives him about, wearing his Driving Mr. Yogi cap. Yogi himself and Bernie Williams wrote a foreword and a preface respectively; Frank Graham Jr., whose father wrote the first major history of the Yankees, contributes the introduction. Indispensable for any fan and for historians of the game of baseball.

View full image by Marton Appel               (Find the Book)
This is magnificent. Appel, a veteran writer and PR person (longtime for the Yankees), manages the near-impossible: a huge, incredibly detailed history of the New York Yankees that never bogs down or spends too long in any one place. The style is as smooth as can be, as Appel moves from the team's murky beginnings in money, politics, and graft and on to Sunday baseball, the Titanic benefit (who knew?), the first Yankee no-hitter, the first World Series win. The Yankees, always conservative, came late to radio, night games, field lighting, and fan promotion. The DH, free agency, the Red Sox rivalry all show up, along with every player you want to remember and some whom fans might not. There were very good years (1927) and bad stretches (1965-75), and Appel rolls right through, chronologically, with a nugget on almost every page: a 17-year-old girl named Jackie Mitchell struck out Ruth and Gehrig on six pitches in an exhibition game in Chattanooga in 1931; no exact transcript exists of Lou Gehrig's luckiest man speech; Yogi Berra comes to spring training every year, and former All-Star Ron Guidry drives him about, wearing his Driving Mr. Yogi cap. Yogi himself and Bernie Williams wrote a foreword and a preface respectively; Frank Graham Jr., whose father wrote the first major history of the Yankees, contributes the introduction. Indispensable for any fan and for historians of the game of baseball. --Booklist

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