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Paperback Brooklyn Remembered: The 1955 Days of the Dodgers Book

ISBN: 1596702206

ISBN13: 9781596702202

Brooklyn Remembered: The 1955 Days of the Dodgers

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In "Brooklyn Remembered: The 1955 Days of the Dodgers, Allen has captured the emotion, the drama and the sweet reverie of what many baseball people and fans consider the greatest sports triumph ever,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great reading - if you're a Dodger fan!!

Very readable and interesting book if you are a Dodger fan! Those of us who can remember that World Series title, have many good memories recalled by reading this book!

"Just gimme one run. That's all I'll need today."---Johnny Podres

Maury Allen is a Dean among American sportswriters and a Brooklyn Dodger fan to the marrow. This is his first book on Dem Bums, written in commemoration of the fiftieth anniversary of Brooklyn's historic only World Series victory. Allen retells all the old baseball legends in this book, particularly the ones that made the Brooklyn Dodgers such a memorable team even in the years when they were not a particularly successful team. The buildup to the Dodgers' era of glory, beginning with the appointment of Larry McPhail as General Manager in 1939, peaking with the phenomenally unmatched Dodger team of 1953 and the World Series victors of 1955, and ending with the Brooklyn Dodgers' ignominious transformation into the Los Angeles National League Baseball Club at the hands of the rebarbative Walter "If You Got Two Bullets And Got Three Targets Then Shoot Him Twice!" O'Malley in 1958, is punctuated with reminiscences of the (circa 2005 then) eleven surviving 1955 Dodgers and their sometime opponents, men like Stan The Man Musial and Ralph Kiner, men who all agree that playing at Ebbets Field was a unique and unforgettable highlight of their playing careers. BROOKLYN REMEMBERED: THE 1955 DAYS OF THE DODGERS is a nostalgic visit to the high point of what Roger Kahn calls The Era, a time so sorely missed, even by those of us who weren't there.

A VERY NICE READ

AUTHOR MAURY ALLEN TAKES US BACK TO 1955, THE YEAR THE BROOKLYN DODGERS FINALLY WON THE WORLD SERIES. HE INTERVIEWS THE 11 REMAINING PLAYERS AND BRINGS BACK SOME GREAT NOSTALGIA. SOME OF THE SURVING PLAYERS ARE KOUFAX, NEWCOMBE, SNIDER AND GAME SEVEN WINNER PODRES. THE STORIES ARE INTERESTING AND ENTERTAINING. I ENJOYED THIS AND RECOMMEND IT FOR ALL DODGER FANS AND FOR BASEBALL FANS WHO WANT TO LEARN ABOUT A SLICE OF BASEBALL HISTORY.

Good Read

For those of us still in the Brooklyn area and those who ventured far away, this book takes you back to the care-free days of the "Brooklyn Bombers." Go for it!

The 1955 Dodgers Revisited

Respected baseball writer Maury Allen has provided us with an update on the 11 surviving members of the 1955 Brooklyn Dodgers' championship team on its 50th anniversary. The book is just over 200 pages long and Allen discusses his visits with the former players and the wives of some of the deceased players. I found several of the stories told in other books on Brooklyn's beloved team, but there were a few stories I hadn't heard before. One involved Gil Hodges who has received more votes than any other player who has not been elected to the Hall of Fame. Supposedly Veterans Committee member Ted Williams has been instrumental in keeping Hodges out not because of his playing ability, but because Hodges was more popular as a manager in Washington than Williams was. Dodgers' executive Buzzie Bavasi felt Jackie Robinson should not have retired as a player when he was traded to the Giants following the 1956 season. He felt Robinson could have become a possible assistant who could one day become the general manager of the Dodgers. That never would have happened with Walter O'Malley owning the team due to the tension that existed between O'Malley and Robinson. Although the 1955 team won Brooklyn's only championship the 1952 and 1953 teams were better than the '55 version. The team was on the way down agewise by 1955 while the 1952 and 1953 team (Roger Kahn's Boys of Summer gang) were in their prime. Author Allen also recounts an incident with manager Walter Alston over some unaccounted soft drinks that hadn't been paid for by the players. Allen wrote a column about what he felt was a petty issue, and Alston invited Allen into his office to discuss it. It resulted in Alston physically attacking Allen. Traveling secretary Lee Scott heard the ruckus and came to Allen's rescue. Several of the members of this team keep their championship ring in a safety deposit box to pass down to succeeding members of their family after they are gone. I find it too bad the ring can't be worn and enjoyed, but they feel the risk of robbery is too great. The book also includes a recap of each of the seven World Series games. No team had ever come back from being down two games to none and won a seven game World Series before. I did find one minor mistake. Allen mentioned that Pirates' slugger Ralph Kiner was traded to the Cubs in 1952 when the correct year is 1953. I'm old enough to remember this team and Kahn's 1953 team as well, and I was happy to read their will be a reunion party for the 1955 team in Brooklyn in the fall of this year, 2005.
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