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The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron

PDF The Last Hero: A Life of Henry Aaron by Howard Bryant in History

Description

In this revelatory chronicle of World War II; Laurence Rees documents the dramatic and secret deals that helped make the war possible and prompted some of the most crucial decisions made during the conflict.Drawing on material available only since the opening of archives in Eastern Europe and Russia; as well as amazing new testimony from nearly a hundred separate witnesses from the period—Rees reexamines the key choices made by Stalin; Churchill and Roosevelt during the war; and presents; in a compelling and fresh way; the reasons why the people of Poland; the Baltic states; and other European countries simply swapped the rule of one tyrant for another. Surprising; incisive; and endlessly intriguing; World War II Behind Closed Doors will change the way we think about the Second World War.


#1049204 in Books 2011-05-03 2011-05-03Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 7.98 x 1.28 x 5.16l; 1.29 #File Name: 0307279928640 pages


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. An epic Henry Aaron storyBy Nicholas R.W. HenningHenry Aaron and the varying social climates throughout his life combine to provide a monumental narrative. Newspaper articles and various personal anecdotes from many people that have known Aaron complement one of baseball's greatest ever journeys. The account identifies baseball achievement as one layer of Aaron; yet gaining a fuller insight of him recognizes that Aaron has reached and succeeded well beyond the borders of the sport.Nicholas R.W. Henning - Australian Baseball Author2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. The most underrated superstar of all-timeBy Barry SparksAuthor Howard Bryant gives Henry (what he is called by all of his friends) Aaron; whom he calls "the most underrated superstar of all time;" his due in this exceptional biography.When Aaron retired after the 1976 season; he held baseball's records for most home runs; most at-bats; most RBI; most total bases and most extra base hits. Only Ty Cobb had more hits and scored more runs. Aaron; however; never quite received the publicity he deserved during his 23-year career.Considered bland by reporters; Aaron preferred to let his actions speak for themselves. Early in his career; he was overshadowed by this Milwaukee Braves teammates--Warren Spahn; Eddie Mathews and Lew Burdette. Later; he played second fiddle to the flashy; child-like and exuberant Willie Mays and the more flamboyant Roberto Clemente.Aaron; however; didn't help his case. Suspicious of the press; self-conscious about his background and uncomfortably thrust into the pre-dominantly all-white world of professional baseball at an early age; Aaron; a loner; built a wall around himself.Non-confrontational; he allowed writers to turn him into a caricature of a simple; uncomplicated black man who wasn't smart enough to understand the reasons for his success.By the age of 24; Aaron had been voted NL MVP; played on a World Championship team; won a batting title and a home run crown. He was; according to the New York Times; "Milwaukee's answer to Mickey Mantle."The Braves played the Yankees in the World Series in 1957 and 1958 and lost a three-game playoff to the Los Angeles Dodgers in 1959. Aaron always felt as if the Braves should have won four consecutive pennants.While Aaron enjoyed some of his best years from 1960-65; the Milwaukee Braves spent just four days in first place during those years.When the Braves moved to Atlanta after the 1965 season; Aaron was less than enthusiastic to return to the deep South where segregation and racism were ever present. Concerned about civil rights; Aaron was reluctant to speak out and he was often criticized for his lack of involvement. He became more outspoken near the end of his career and in retirement.After being overlooked in the 60s; attention turned to Aaron in the early 70s as people realized he had a chance to break Babe Ruth's career home run mark. The quest to break Ruth's record became joyless as hate mongers threatened Aaron. Even baseball snubbed him when Commissioner Bowie Kuhn wasn't present for his 700th homer and baseball didn't recognize the achievement in any special way.Aaron; the first player to collect 3;000 hits and 500 home runs; resented being considered a one-dimensional power hitter and being defined by his home run record.After the Braves made little or no attempt to keep him after the 1974 season and didn't seriously consider him as a potential manager; Aaron was traded to the Milwaukee Brewers. Although it was a chance for the financially struggling Aaron to cash some hefty checks; all the magic was gone. In two seasons with the Brewers; he batted .234 and .229; slugging a total of 22 home runs.In retirement; Aaron prospered financially and made peace somewhat with the baseball establishment. Although he hoped to be the first unanimous selection to the Hall of Fame in 1982; Aaron received 97.8 percent of the vote; second highest to Cobb's 98.2 percent.4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. OutstandingBy David DearbornAs some of the other customer reviewers have indicated; this is a book about America in the 1950s and 60s; just as it's a fine personal account of the great Henry Aaron. I found it exceptionally well-written; with the baseball action always vivid and the cumulative portrait of Aaron across the decades no less riveting in a different way entirely. This is because; even with Aaron's cooperation (a coup in itself); the author had to meet the challenge of portraying a relatively private man who never wore his heart on his sleeve (well; maybe with the exception of his uncharacteristic; in-air fight with Rico Carty). Howard Bryant succeeded admirably -- his analyses of Aaron the man and athlete are clear and penetrating; and the reader comes away with well-rounded pictures of both realms. No matter what cruelties he encountered (including from the press) amid his many triumphs; Aaron stayed true to himself and proved to be more of unassuming role model than people knew when the steroid era dawned. Seeing places like Mobile; Milwaukee and Atlanta through the prism of Aaron's experience; we learn a lot about America (south and north) and baseball in an era when both nation and sport moved slowly to more enlightened levels. The story of the Braves' move from Boston to Milwaukee is fascinating in itself (as are the portraits of teammates Spahn; Mathews; Adcock; Bruton and Burdette). Bryant also gives us deep thematic contrasts between Aaron; Willie Mays and Jackie Robinson. There's a lot of rich baseball history in "The Last Hero;" and throughout it towers a class act whose ambition to be the best baseball player alive was matched by his pure strength of character. A genuine page-turner.

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