Schoolboy: The Untold Journey of a Yankees Hero
4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars | 65 ratings
Price: 17.5
Last update: 11-17-2024
About this item
Waite "Schoolboy" Hoyt's improbable baseball journey began when the 1915 New York Giants signed him as a high school junior, for no pay and a five-dollar bonus.
Based on a trove of Hoyt's writings and interview transcripts, Tim Manners has reanimated the baseball legend's untold story, entirely in Hoyt's own words.
Over his twenty-three-year professional baseball career, Hoyt won 237 big league games across 3,845 2/3 innings—and one locker room brawl with Babe Ruth.
He writes at length about the art of pitching and how the game and its players changed—and didn't—over his lifetime. After retiring from baseball at thirty-eight and coming to terms with his alcoholism, Hoyt found some happiness as a family man and a beloved, pioneering Cincinnati Reds radio sportscaster with a Websterian vocabulary spiked with a Brooklyn accent.
When Hoyt died in 1984 his foremost legacy may have been as a raconteur who punctuated his life story with awe-inspiring and jaw-dropping anecdotes. In Schoolboy he never flinches from an unsparing account of his remarkable and paradoxical eighty-four-year odyssey.
Top reviews from the United States
This is a uniquely compelling, fun, fast moving and very informative book! I can say this with some authority because as Waite Hoyt's son, I had the opportunity to read every attempt at writing a book about my father that various professional writers made over the years, starting with my Dad's own attempt which he began after retiring from broadcasting the Cincinnati Reds' games in 1965. The brilliance and uniqueness of Tim Manners' approach is that after reviewing all of the material available relating to my father, Tim decided that the best approach was NOT to write a book ABOUT my father but to use the hundreds of recorded interviews, articles, broadcasts, fan letters and other authors' aborted attempts to compose the book in my father's own words. As a result, we now have - one hundred years later - a fast-moving, chronologically-ordered composite treasury of first hand observations about the growth of organized baseball in its early years, the start of the NY Yankees dynasty and its dominance in the 1920s and, of course, comments and opinions about the leading baseball stars of that decade, including Ruth, Gehrig, Ty Cobb, Rogers Hornsby, Grover Cleveland Alexander and Walter Johnson, etc., - all from somebody who himself was a star player who actually played with and against and knew personally all of the players he mentions. In this context, the book is riveting - even to somebody like me who grew-up with baseball and thought he had heard it all. No way! When I finished it, I wanted more. Thank you Tim Manners for a World Series winning effort! It is just the BEST!
Waite Hoyt came to major league baseball as a 16 year old and had some incredible World Series moments as a NY Yankee pitcher, on the field alongside legends like Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. During his 21 seasons in baseball, he had a lucrative side gig as a vaudeville performer in the off season (true!). He later earned renown as a sportscaster for the Cincinnati Reds and was inducted into the Hall of Fame.
Hoyt's tale is related in his own voice, as a first-person memoir. As a collaborator, Manners brings his own enthusiast's perspective to the story. There's a great deal of detail here. Waite wrote a lot down during his colorful life.
This is a sports book, and it describes some on-field heroism, but in the end it is more about how a multi-talented athlete, performer and raconteur embraced life in the public eye. Preparing it was a labor of love for Manners, and it shows on every page.