A collection of Zane Grey's baseball tales captures the spirit of American baseball during the time of the first World War an includes such stories as "The Redheaded Outfield" and "The Rube's Pennant."
Pearl Zane Grey was an American author best known for his popular adventure novels and stories that presented an idealized image of the rugged Old West. As of June 2007, the Internet Movie Database credits Grey with 110 films, one TV episode, and a series, Dick Powell's Zane Grey Theater based loosely on his novels and short stories.
When I was a mere lad some 60 years prior, "The Red-Headed Outfield" was included in a Cub Scout magazine called Boys' Life, to which I subscribed. Red Gilbat (batty), Reddy Clammer (clamors for attention), and the Willie Mays-esque Reddie Ray (a ray of light) captured my young imagination. In subsequent years I have searched for "The Red-Headed Outfield," even combing the books for sale at the Zane Grey museum in eastern Ohio, but only found it in rare books selling for upwards of $50. What a surprise when my daughter presented me with this classic on my 70th birthday. I dove into it, and yes, Red was still goofy, Reddy still a hot dog, and Reddie the epitome of class, grace, competitiveness, and athletic perfection. The other stories in the book are amusing (in an anachronistic sense), but you go to a steak house for the steak, not the potatoes. Feast on the title story, and imagine yourself covering the entire outfield, then winning the game with an inside the park grand slam. Now if my daughter could locate an authentic Reddie Ray jersey....
This is an old collection of baseball stories by the popular western writer Zane Grey. The baseball terms are anachronistic. Two stories are very similar to two other stories.
Written in 1915, these baseball stories for boys are interesting, and evoke a spirit of the time in which they are set. Baseball has certainly changed in the last hundred years!
A collection of dated and corny baseball stories from Zane Grey, the writer of the Lone Ranger stories. Most of the stories drag and conclude blandly. The funnies aren’t funny and the action isn’t exciting. Grey’s weird social conventions are also distracting. For example, one story hinges on the idea that a woman was likely to have her life ruined by agreeing to kiss a man to whom she isn’t married. Another on the idea that cripples (Grey's word choice) are and feel worthless. None of the stories are really memorable for positive reasons. All are insipid.
This book discusses a minor-league baseball team, and gives good characterizations of the players, managers, and their wives. It would be interesting to people who love baseball.
Fun at first, even though I don't know much anything about baseball. I like the stories about the rube, even though they appeared to be out of order. But at the end, the same story was pretty much repeated, just from two different points of view (but not actually the same story, thus really boring.) Not that worth it.