He was Black and gay in a racist and homophobic society, growing up poor without the privilege of a family safety net. He came of age in the wrong places at the wrong time, with the introduction of cocaine in baseball, AIDS in the Castro, and crack in the inner city just at the moments he entered those spaces...He spiraled into deeper and deeper levels of despair.
Glenn Burke, a former MLB player, deserves your attention. His story, his journey, and his struggles may not be known by many, but they should be. His atypical rise to major league sports was filled with energy, pizzaz, and jest. But his fall was quick, tragic, and sadly, representative of the times. Burke was a closeted gay man and that didn't align well with MLB culture in the 70s and 80s. He was benched by coaches, slandered by even his team's hometown fans, offered money by his franchise to marry a woman to silence rumors, and ultimately, pushed out of baseball all together.
Up until a year ago, I never knew his name or story. He was a small footnote in an LGBTQ+ history book I read. What caught my attention was that he is accredited as inventing the high five. How cool is that? However, there are so many more layers to his journey. He was a black, gay man trying to play major league baseball when homophobia was reaching all corners of the country. If that wasn't enough, he then had to navigate the AIDS epidemic, the rise of drug culture in the Bay area, and homelessness.
This book. This story...taught me so much. It taught me about the importance of living your truth. It taught me about the ugliness of homophobia from the past AND present. It taught me about how no story should be silenced or forgotten--dear readers--don't let his. Recommended for GR 8 and up.