BookDigger.com Home
Biography Books
Adams, John
Adams, John Quincy
Alexander The Great
Andersen, Hans C.
Antoinette, Marie
Arendt, Hannah
Atwood, Margaret
Augustine, Saint
Austen, Jane
Bach, Johann Sebastian
Beatles, The
Beethoven, Ludwig
Beethoven, Ludwig van
Bell, Alexander Graham
Bolivar, Simon
Bonaparte, Napoleon
Boone, Daniel
Brahms, Johannes
Buchanan, James
Buckley, William F.
Buddha
Bush, George
Bush, George W.
Bush, George Walker
Caesar, Julius
Carnegie, Andrew
Carter, Jimmy
Castro, Fidel
Catherine The Great
Chaplin, Charlie
Charles, Ray
Cher
Child, Julia
Churchill, Winston
Clark, Lewis And
Clinton, Bill
Columbus, Christopher
Cook, James
Curie, Marie
Dalai, Lama
Darwin, Charles
Dean, James
Degas, Edgar
Dickens, Charles
Disney, Walt
Douglass, Frederick
Drake, Sir Francis
Dylan, Bob
Earhart, Amelia
Eastwood, Clint
Edison, Thomas
Einstein, Albert
Eisenhower, Dwight D.
England, Prince Charles of
England, Prince William of
Fields, W.C.
Ford, Gerald
Ford, Henry
Frank, Anne
Franklin, Ben
Franklin, Benjamin
Freud, Sigmund
Frye, Northrop
Galilei, Galileo
Gandhi, Mahatma
Garfield, James A.
Garland, Judy
Gates, Bill
Gogh, Vincent Van
Graham, Billy
Grant, Ulysses S.
Great, Alexander the
Groening, Matt
Guevara, Che
Hamilton, Alexander
Harrison, William
Hawthorne, Nathaniel
Hemingway, Ernest
Hendrix, Jimi
Henry VIII
Hitchcock, Alfred
Hitler, Adolf
Holmes, Oliver Wendell
Hoover, Herbert
Houdini, Harry
Hudson, Henry
Hughes, Howard
Humphrey, Hubert H.
Jackson, Andrew
Jackson, Michael
James, Jesse
James, William
Jefferson, Thomas
Johnson, Andrew
Johnson, Lyndon
Jordan, Michael
Joyce, James
Jung, Carl
Kafka, Franz
Keller, Helen
Kennedy, John F.
Kennedy, Robert
Kid, Billy the
King, Martin Luther
Kissinger, Henry A.
Lautrec, Henri Toulouse
Lee, Robert E.
Lennon, John
Lewis, C. S.
Lincoln, Abraham
Luther, Martin
Machiavelli, Niccolo
Madison, James
Malcolm X
Mandela, Nelson
Manet, Edouard
Marshall, John
Marshall, Thurgood
Martin, Dean
Marx, Karl
McCartney, Paul
McKinley, William
Monroe, James
Monroe, Marilyn
Montgomery, L. M.
Mozart
Mussolini, Benito
Napoleon
Newman, Paul
Newton, Isaac
Nietzsche, Friedrich
Nixon, Richard
Onassis, Jacqueline K.
Ormond, Julia
Pascal, Blaise
Pasteur, Louis
Pele
Picasso, Pablo
Plath, Sylvia
Poe, Edgar Allan
Pope John Paul II
Presley, Elvis
Princess Diana
Proust, Marcel
Queen Elizabeth
Rand, Ayn
Reagan, Ronald
Revere, Paul
Ripper, Jack The
Robert E. Lee
Robinson, Jackie
Rockwell, Norman
Rodin, Auguste
Roosevelt, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Theodore
Russell, Bertrand
Ruth, Babe
Schubert, Franz
Schweitzer, Albert
Seuss, Dr.
Sinatra, Frank
Stewart, Martha
Taylor, Elizabeth
Taylor, Zachary
Tchaikovsky, Piotr I.
Tecumseh
Teresa, Mother
Thatcher, Margaret
Truman, Harry
Tubman, Harriet
Twain, Mark
Tyler, John
Van Beethoven, Ludwig
Vinci, Leonardo Da
Washington, George
Webster, Daniel
Wells, H.G.
Wilder, Laura Ingalls
Williams, Ted
Wilson, Woodrow
Woods, Tiger
Wright, Frank Lloyd
Yeats, William Butler

All Biography Books
View Cart | Help

Hank Aaron and the Home Run That Changed America


Home > Biography Books > Hank Aaron > Item 2


Previous Hank Aaron Book Next Hank Aaron Book

Click here to buy Hank Aaron and the Home Run That Changed America by  Tom Stanton. Hank Aaron and the Home Run That Changed America
by Tom Stanton
Sales Rank: 429563
5.0 out of 5 stars
List Price: $13.95
$11.86
At Amazon
on 11-24-2008
Buy Hank Aaron and the Home Run That Changed America Now!

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Harper Paperbacks March 29, 2005
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060722908
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060722906
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces

    From Publishers Weekly
    In April 1974, Hank Aaron hit his 715th home run, breaking Babe Ruth's longstanding record for homers, which Aaron had days earlier tied on his first swing of the '74 baseball season. Stanton, whose The Final Season won the Casey Award for best baseball book of 2001, gives a solid account of Aaron's career and the tumultuous year preceding his historic run. This is a fitting celebration in advance of the upcoming 30th anniversary of the event, as well as a solid tribute to the man who "played in more games, got more at-bats, knocked in more runs, collected more total bases, recorded more extra-base hits, and hit more home runsâ€"755â€"than any other ballplayer." The most fascinating and horrifying part of Stanton's accountâ€"sadly for baseball historyâ€"is the extent to which Aaron's historic run was marred by constant hate mail and death threats from so-called fans angry that a black man would soon be breaking a white man's record. Stanton effectively uses ballpark attendance records to show that, while Aaron was selling out stadiums across the country, his own Atlanta Braves ballpark was "two-thirds empty" on the day that he hit home run 700, and that 10,000 seats were unsold before the day he broke the record, while 35 million to 40 million people watched or listened to the game worldwide. Stanton shows how Aaron came to understand that "the home run record carried significance beyond baseball," and how he effectively used the media attention to consciously continue the legacy of Jackie Robinson and strongly argue for the increased role of African-Americans in major league baseball management.
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

    From Booklist
    Stanton covers the time from the funeral of Jackie Robinson in 1972 to the spring of 1974, when Hank Aaron hit his 715th home run and passed Babe Ruth's record. His prose is awash in that sentimental, old-fashioned baseball reporting style as he connects Aaron to Ruth; to Robinson, who was one of Aaron's heroes; to Willie Mays, nearly Aaron's contemporary and the other great black player during his era; and to other black players of the time, including Dusty Baker. Stanton is at pains to describe the viciousness of the hate mail Aaron was subjected to as he challenged Ruth, the threats to his family, and the lack of support the Atlanta Braves got at home. But he also writes about the groundswell of support that grew for Aaron and the fan ecstasy that accompanied him at the end and beyond. It's a sobering tale, but a hero's story. GraceAnne DeCandido
    Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

  • Hank Aaron and the Home Run That Changed America
    Available from Amazon
    Price: $11.86
    Updated on 11-24-2008

    Buy Hank Aaron and the Home Run That Changed America Now!


    Previous Hank Aaron Book Next Hank Aaron Book


    Search For Products:

    Powered by Arc Spider - Smart Shopping Search Engine   
    Privacy Statement

    Search:
    Keywords:
    In Association with Amazon.com


    NOTICE: All product prices, availability, and specifications
    are subject to verification by their respective retailers.


    Copyright © 2008 Dominant Systems Corporation
    info@bookdigger.com         Privacy Policy
    Last Modified : 11-24-2008