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FENWAY 1912 by Glenn Stout

FENWAY 1912

The Birth of a Ballpark, a Championship Season, and Fenway's Remarkable First Year

by Glenn Stout

Pub Date: Oct. 13th, 2011
ISBN: 978-0-547-19562-9
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

A comprehensive look at the first season played by the Boston Red Sox in their new home, the legendary Fenway Park.

To many fans, Fenway is the Mecca of baseball, a symbol of everything the game represents and aspires to be. But in 1912, it was just one of four new baseball stadiums utilizing newly developed concrete-and-steel construction methods—evidence, writes Best American Sports Writing series editor Stout (Young Woman and the Sea: How Trudy Ederle Conquered the English Channel and Inspired the World, 2009, etc.) “of just how deeply the game of baseball had become ingrained into the fabric of American life.” The Sox’ 1912 season was a remarkable one, and the author takes the reader inside the locker room, management offices and the field. The team featured such luminaries as Hall-of-Famer Tris Speaker, pitching ace “Smoky” Joe Wood, player/manager Jake Stahl and a supporting cast of characters including Duffy Lewis, “Hick” Cady, “Heinie” Wagner, Buck O’Brien and the Sox’ famous booster club the Royal Rooters. But the book’s most important character is Fenway itself, and Stout spares no detail of its design, construction and effect on the game. The author’s meticulous approach makes the book a valuable addition to baseball history, but the level of detail occasionally bogs down the narrative. Things pick up during the recounting of the World Series, an eight-game marathon (including one tie) ending with the Sox’ triumph over the vaunted New York Giants. The author does an excellent job of portraying the differences in the game between that era—when “the owners were the kings and the players lowly serfs”—and today. Throughout, Fenway Park, “a ballpark for the heart and soul,” shines as a beacon for America’s game. Baseball diehards and historians, and of course Red Sox fans, will find much of interest in this paean to one of sport’s most famous venues.