Meticulously reported and elegantly written, The Last Boy is a baseball  tapestry that weaves together episodes from the author's weekend with  The Mick in Atlantic City, where she interviewed her hero in 1983, after  he was banned from baseball, with reminiscences from friends and family  of the boy from Commerce, Oklahoma, who would lead the Yankees to seven  world championships, be voted the American League's Most Valuable  Player three times, win the Triple Crown in 1956, and duel teammate  Roger Maris for Babe Ruth's home run crown in the summer of 1961---the  same boy who would never grow up.
As she did so memorably in her  biography of Sandy Koufax, Jane Leavy transcends the hyperbole of hero  worship to reveal the man behind the coast-to-coast smile, who grappled  with a wrenching childhood, crippling injuries, and a genetic  predisposition to alcoholism. In The Last Boy she chronicles her search  to find out more about the person he was and, given what she discovers,  to explain his mystifying hold on a generation of baseball fans, who  were seduced by that lopsided, gap-toothed grin. It is an uncommon  biography, with literary overtones: not only a portrait of an icon, but  an investigation of memory itself. How long was the Tape Measure Home  Run? Did Mantle swing the same way right-handed and left-handed? What  really happened to the red-haired, freckle-faced boy known back home as  Mickey Charles?
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