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Isabel “Lefty” Alvarez: The Improbable Life of a Cuban American Baseball Star

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Kat D. Williams traces Isabel “Lefty” Alvarez’s life from her childhood in Cuba, where she played baseball with the boys on the streets of El Cerro, to her reinvention as a professional baseball player and American citizen. Isabel “Lefty” Alvarez gives the reader a look into Alvarez’s young life in Cuba during the turbulent years leading up to Castro’s revolution, as political differences tore families apart. Alvarez came to the United States at fifteen, speaking no English, and experienced the challenge of immigration as her mother pushed her to become a professional athlete in her newly adopted country.
              
Through all the changes and upheaval, Alvarez found acceptance and success as a player in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, where she was called “the Rascal of El Cerro.” After the league ended, Alvarez struggled with an undiagnosed learning disability that limited her options. She persevered and reinvented herself as a factory worker but later battled alcoholism and depression until baseball returned to her life and she was able to reconnect with her former teammates and become part of the active community of former players.
              
Alvarez’s life story illustrates the struggle and strength of a young Latina immigrant and the importance of sport to her transition to her new country and her enduring identity.
 

224 pages, Hardcover

First published May 1, 2020

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About the author

Kat D. Williams

4 books6 followers
Dr. Kat Williams is a Professor of Women’s Sport History at Marshall University, author of The All-American Girls After the AAGPBL: How Playing Pro Ball Shaped Their Lives, and Isabel Lefty Alvarez: The Improbable Life of a Cuban American Baseball Star. Through her teaching, scholarship and advocacy Kat has dedicated many years to the preservation of girl’s and women’s baseball history. She continues that work as president and a founding member of the International Women’s Baseball Center.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Lance.
1,673 reviews165 followers
April 11, 2020
The film “A League of Their Own” was the introduction of the All-American Girls’ Professional Baseball League (AAGPBL) to many people. While the movie was a decent look at life for the women who played hardball, real life for players was not always what was portrayed in the movie. One such woman was Isabel “Lefty” Alvarez, who played her first game in the league when she was a 15 year old away from her homeland of Cuba for the first time. Her story is one that makes for a very interesting book.

Author Kat D. Williams takes much of her material for the book from her interviews and later friendship with Lefty – the name Williams uses throughout the book. This is the complete story of not only Lefty’s life in both Cuba and the United States, but it also contains much material on the history of baseball in Cuba and also a deep look at some of the political upheaval in Cuba, especially with the overthrow of the Batista government in 1959. That was important in Lefty’s childhood as her father Prudencio worked for Batista’s police force and had to switch careers when he was overthrown. Between this and Lefty’s mother’s wish for Lefty to have a middle class life, Lefty was placed into job interviews and proposals that were not for her. When her mother Virtudes let her play sports, that became the identity Lefty needed in order to have some type of career.

Identity is a common theme throughout the book, as Williams talks frequently about Lefty was constantly struggling with her true identity. Baseball was what ended up being her calling to go to the United States (at her mom’s urging) and she was able to play with the Chicago Colleens, a barnstorming AAGPBL team. That team was like a minor league team for the major leagues, but Lefty did well enough that she not only came back for a second year, but she played for the Fort Wayne Daisies in the “big leagues”

Lefty faced the challenges all Latino ballplayers face when coming to the United States for the first time – a new environment in a big city and knowing little or no English. Because players in the AAGPBL either roomed together for living quarters or were billeted with a family, Lefty made an impression on many people, but because of her insecurities, she had a hard time making true friends or developing relationships.

This aspect of her life was well illustrated by Williams, as was Lefty’s life after the demise of the AAGPBL. Whether it was her new identity as a factory worker, which she did until her retirement in 1979, her battles with alcoholism or later her joyful reunion with many of her AAGPBL alumni, the reader will be right there with Lefty as she ends up carving out that middle class existence that her mother wanted for her. One very nice tidbit Williams adds is that Lefty was one of the actual AAGPBL players who made a cameo appearance in “A League of Their Own” during the reunion scene at the Baseball Hall of Fame.

One other notable item about the book is the format. There is a lot of information about not only the Cuban revolution but also the history of Cuban baseball. While it seems like these topics would not relevant to Lefty’s life, they were as Lefty insisted that Williams include them in the book. That statement, and how Williams was true to Lefty’s legacy, is what makes this book a very good read. It is not only about a baseball player in the AAGPBL, but also about a young Latino woman who makes good in America.

I wish to thank University of Nebraska Press for providing a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

https://sportsbookguy.blogspot.com/20...
Profile Image for Catherine  Mustread.
3,055 reviews96 followers
February 20, 2022
Baseball by the Book 052620: Author Kat Williams joins us to discuss the remarkable life of Isabel "Lefty" Alvarez, who came to United States at fifteen, speaking no English, to play professional baseball. Williams take us on a journey from Cuba to the AAGPBL and through years of anonymity and alcoholism before baseball once again gave her life meaning. 
16 reviews
May 29, 2020
I have been curious since I was a little girl watching league of their own about the players. I enjoyed learning about "Lefty" and her life in the league and out of the league. I totally suggest it to anyone who wants to learn more about the AAGPL and one of their amazing players.

thank you to netgalley for allowing me the chance to read this book in exchange for a review.
Profile Image for Ryan Woodward.
6 reviews2 followers
August 22, 2020
Isabel “Lefty” Alvarez: The Improbable Life of a Cuban American Baseball Star offers readers an extraordinary story of a teenager who left home - left her country - to be a professional baseball player in the 1940s. Such an adventurous life did not exist, however, without sadness, challenges, and loneliness. Lefty Alvarez’s friendship with author Kat Williams is evident in this book, and necessary to providing such a complete picture of an athlete whose talents took her from Cuba to the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League and a new life in the United States.

A great deal of the book is devoted to the history of Cuba, including that of sports in Cuba, which played a large role in the developing country’s identity. This is essential for establishing the political and cultural circumstances in which Lefty was raised that shaped her own personality, including the idea of sport identity, a recurring theme in the book, that would sustain Lefty for the rest of her life.

League history enthusiasts will appreciate the added detail, often overlooked in the general narrative, of AAGPBL training and touring in Cuba and throughout Central America, of which Lefty participated. Seen through lens of Lefty, readers will learn about the political and social climate of these countries, the thrill of first-time air travel, and the rigorous schedule of being a professional ballplayer – all as experienced by a teenaged girl.

While the author offers plenty on baseball, the true star of the book is identity and the examination of the multiple factors that go into shaping one’s personality, goals, and perspective.
Profile Image for Steve.
136 reviews8 followers
May 4, 2020
In many ways this is the perfect sporting story for me, combining one of my favourite sports with a social history and a personal struggle. Lefty Alvarez grew up in poverty in Cuba, shy and uncertain of herself she was pushed by her mother to break out of the poor life that she had come to resent. Split between love for her mother, her desire to please, and the increasingly desperate and in some cases abusive routes she was being sent down, Lefty finally found release through baseball, the game within which she was able to find her identity.

The writing, however, feels clunky at times and in places it feels like the author is stretching the story to fill the necessary pages for a book. It is an appealing narrative and a story that it is good to hear told, but it may have been more appropriate within a broader context that allowed greater scope for the writing.

It’s not that there isn’t a lot to go for here with a young girl growing up in a country wrestling with its own uncertain future. There are mirrors in their struggles as Cuba battles through revolution and uprising to the tough reality of going it alone and Lefty herself breaking free first to a hopeful life of travel and professional sport and then an isolation and alcohol dependency when sport disappears.

Lefty’s is a good story and in the context of female participation in sport, as well as immigration and social mobility, it is an important one that I am glad I have been able to hear. The timeline in the back of the book also shows how powerful stories can be, as women are shown to be playing again an increasing role in baseball. It is good that women’s baseball is getting recognition and this book gives Lefty Alvarez her place in that history, which is clearly well deserved.
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