This book was so much fun. For baseball history buffs and for biography inclined people alike. If you're seeking a read on an eccentric who was great at what he did (despite his many hilarious quirks), this look at Waddell is sure to make you laugh and appreciative of the man, the myth, and his profound and odd accomplishments.
For a hilarious look at Rube - (Philadelphia North American, August 12, 1903) ...
"In the seventh inning, Rube Waddell hoisted a long foul over the right field bleachers that landed on the roof of the biggest bean cannery in Boston. In descending, the ball fell on the roof of the engine room and jammed itself between the steam whistle and the stem of the valve that operates it. The pressure set the whistle blowing. It lacked a few minutes of five o’clock, yet the workmen started to leave the building. They thought quitting time had come.
The incessant screeching of the bean-factory whistle led engineers in neighboring factories to think fire had broken out and they turned on their whistles. With a dozen whistles going full blast, a policeman sent in an alarm of fire. Just as the engines arrived, a steam cauldron in the first factory, containing a ton of beans, blew up.
The explosion dislodged Waddell’s foul fly and the whistle stopped blowing, but that was not the end of the trouble."
This, like Waddell's penchant for stopping pitching mid-game and chasing fire-trucks rocketing by the stadium, wrestling alligators and lions at a circus in the offseason—creates an image of a supremely free-spirited man. Baseball historians have a hard time deciphering if he actually blew up a bean factory in Boston via foul ball, but for the rest, it is all undoubtedly true, and no other book offers quite as good a look at Waddell than this work by Alan Howard Levy.
Gosh! This was a super fun read. Learning about primitive minor league teams and the old days of the independent baseball circuit across the US was equally as engaging. Other than some drawn out pacing at times, this book makes a truly great read.