Vintage Books
Sports
Collectors Digest
April 2002 |
The Collective
Works of
Babe, Lou, Joe and Mickey
By Marty Appel
It sounds like a joke, right?
“The Collective
Works of Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle.”
Just the thing to go on the bookshelf next to your Hemingways, Steinbecks,
Orwells and Joyces.
So let’s face it, Babe, Lou, Joe and Mickey didn’t
really write the books that are attributed to them. But they make for
a fun
collection, and we would at least like to think that at some point, they
may have at least read the books, if not the manuscripts. And they are
of course, the quartet of Yankee immortals whose books will always be
of interest to fans and historians.
First, as for
Gehrig – forget it, there were none. It seems as
though Lou might have considered a book, perhaps an autobiography, when
his career came to its untimely end in 1939. In a letter to his wife
after his diagnosis, he wrote, “Playing is out of the question
and {Dr.} Paul {O’Leary} suggests a coaching job or a job in the
office or writing.”
So he did think
of writing, but it just didn’t happen. He took
an office job with the New York City Board of Parole, and had no time,
or strength, to write. It would have been a wonderful contribution to
the game.
Babe Ruth employed
ghost writers Christy Walsh, his promoter/agent, and Ford Frick, a
sportswriter who
would
become N.L. President and then
Commissioner. The two often scripted newspaper columns for the Babe during
World Series, offering his view of the games. Walsh, as “Babe Ruth,” wrote
the foreword to a book called “Babe Ruth, The Idol of the American
Boy,” by Dan Daniel of the New York Telegram in 1930. (Whitman
Publishing). The six-page foreword is signed “Babe Ruth” but
says “courtesy of Christy Walsh.” At least it was honest.
It was likely
Frick who wrote “Babe Ruth’s Own Book of
Baseball,” published by G.P. Putnam’s Sons in 1928. Did Babe
have anything to do with it? Probably. Frick must have spent time on
train rides getting responses from him, and some of it is clearly his
own. It’s not autobiographical, just filled with tales from the
diamond, humor, and observations on things like “College Men in
Baseball.” I found the glossary especially fascinating, filled
with terms long removed from our language. “The Syracuse Car” was
the “Pullman in which rookies and substitutes ride.” “Doing
a Sammy Vick” was “overeating.” Great stuff.
Jerome Holtzman wrote an introduction to a reissue by Bison Books in
1992.
Babe’s autobiography was published by Dutton in 1948, the year
he died. Work had begun on it in ’47, when he was first becoming
ill with the throat cancer that would take his life. It was “as
told to Bob Considine.” Considine was a well known journalist and
radio personality, but not especially a sports expert. He was assisted
by the uncredited Fred Lieb, who had covered most of Ruth’s career.
Considine (whose son Tim was a popular actor in Walt Disney TV and film
dramas), was thus Ruth’s ghost, while employing Lieb as his own
ghost.
About nine weeks
before he died, Ruth traveled to Yale University where he presented
the typed manuscript
to the Yale
library. The Yale first
baseman and future, 41st President, George Bush, accepted the gift. “I
left out a few things,” said Babe. “Maybe there should have
been two books – one for kids, one for adults.”
The published
book, which begins, “I was a bad kid,” was
one for younger readers.
And how closely did Ruth work with Considine?
There was a story
about a New York book party right after the publication, at which Considine
supposedly
approached
the Babe and asked if he would
sign his personal copy. “Sure,” said the Babe. “And
your name again?”
DiMaggio, as author, had three books attributed to him. As much as
he always sought privacy, it was fairly amazing that he could be talked
into this three times.
The first was
an autobiography called “Lucky to be a Yankee,” published
in 1947 by Rudolph Field. It was updated in 1948 for a Bantam Books edition,
and then again in 1957 when Grosset & Dunlap reissued it as part
of their growing Big League Baseball Library series, minus the introduction
by James Farley, former U.S. Postmaster General and a major Yankee fan.
Grantland Rice wrote a foreword. The book was actually written, but uncredited,
by Tom Meany, a much respected New York sportswriter who wrote many baseball
books and ended his career as the first PR Director of the New York Mets.
Perhaps the oddest
sentence in the book comes near the end, when Joe rattles off great
memories, and
includes “The
toy manufacturer, a friend of mine, who sent me a set of electric trains
two months before
Dorothy and I were married.”
Were these toy
trains Joe’s “Rosebud?”
There is a chapter
on hitting and outfielding in “Lucky,” and
in 1948, Joe returned with “Baseball for Everyone,” an instructional
book published by McGraw Hill, which also made its way to the Big League
Baseball Library. Although instructional, it is woven with tales of real
players, real moments.
This time, in an acknowledgment, Joe thanks Meany. Credit at last.
The book is interesting
for the names it recalls, and for the solid advice offered to aspiring
players.
One
has to believe that Joe was an
active participant in its preparation, for how could he entrust Meany
to get all the mechanics of a game right? The tips still read true today;
it’s an excellent instructional manual.
McGraw Hill,
one of the few 1948 publishers still around today under the same name,
has now reissued
the book,
(this time with an index),
with the original typeface, original sketches and photographs, and a
new foreword by Peter Goldenbock. It is rare that an old baseball book
is reprinted, except by SABR or small publishing houses, and so good
for McGraw Hill to produce this. Let’s hope others might follow.
“The DiMaggio Albums,” a two-volume, slipcased set, was
published by G.P. Putnam’s Sons in 1989 with much anticipation.
The early buzz was that Joe had somehow done an autobiography. Writer
Richard Whittingham was recruited to compile the material, and many of
the photos, magazine covers, even clippings, came from the collection
of Barry Halper, whose residence Joe called home on visits to New York.
Autographed editions
of the books were marketed for hundreds of dollars, but many found
the books disappointing.
It wasn’t a revealing autobiography
at all, but a scrapbook – a collection of positive newspaper clippings
(no Marilyn, of course), that was fascinating, but lacked any insight
into Joe. The books did not sell as well as hoped, and were found on
bookstore remainder tables within a year.
As for Barry,
whose collection was critical to the book’s content,
he received a leather-bound edition, but when he asked Joe to sign it,
DiMaggio shooed him away and said, “you’ve got enough autographs.”
The first book “written” under Mickey Mantle’s byline
was “The Quality of Courage,” published in 1964, his last
great season. It was actually prepared by Sports Illustrated’s
distinguished Bob Creamer, who later wrote “Babe” and “Stengel.” The
book contained short bios of many heroic baseball figures, and Mick contributed
little to their essays, other than approving them. (“How about
one on Jackie Robinson?” said Creamer. “Yeah, he had guts,” Mick
would respond.). The two met at Mick’s St. Moritz Hotel suite and
the ice cream parlor Rumpelmayer’s to review the book on several
occasions, but Mickey’s only small corrections were on the chapter
about his father, which he took care to get right.
When the book
was published by Doubleday, Creamer brought a copy to the Yankee clubhouse
to get signed
for his
five children. “Sure,” said
Mantle, “what are their names?” Bob answered, and Mick took
the book to a quiet corner of the room and signed “To Jim, Tom,
John, Ellen & Bobby, My best wishes - from the man who taught your
father a few lessons in journalism - Your Friend, Mickey Mantle.”
“A very nice message on the spur of the moment,” says Creamer
today, still touched by the gesture. “And as long as he lived,
he always told me how he still gets nice comments on the book.”
In 1967, Simon
and Schuster issued “The
Education of a Baseball Player.”
This one, by Mickey, was written by Bob Smith, and contained autobiographical
recollections as well as instructions. Mick did spend time with Smith
telling anecdotes, like the time an older woman in the stands told him
to knock off the profanity after striking out. He apologized to her.
A nice story.
In 1977, Mickey’s name joined Whitey Ford’s and the New
York Times’ Joe Durso in a book of funny, and sometimes profane
stories called “Whitey and Mickey,” published by Viking.
Some of the stories bordered on the kinds of things they resented Jim
Bouton telling in “Ball Four,” but no one was very critical
at that stage; the secret of Mickey’s runaround life was pretty
well known by then.
So it was with
some surprise that the long awaited real autobiography, “The
Mick,” (Doubleday, 1985), reverted back to the PG-13 version of
Mantle’s life. This one was written with Herb Gluck, who had co-authored
Alex Karras’s football autobiography. Mickey said there wasn’t
good chemistry between him and Gluck, and the book read like a 1957 version
of Mick’s life.
In his final
years, Mickey had his name on three other titles. In 1991, he and Phil
Pepe prepared “My Favorite Summer – 1956” for
Doubleday, a warm retelling of his Triple Crown year. “I was surprised
by how actively involved he was,” says Pepe, the well liked newspaper
columnist and broadcaster. “He read the manuscript pages on his
frequent flights; he hand-wrote a lot of edits, and we met six or seven
times in New York to tape and to go over material. You can be sure I
still have those tapes and his handwritten notes!”
In 1994 came “All My Octobers,” (HarperCollins), his World
Series recollections, written with Houston sportswriter Mickey Herskowitz.
And that same year, he contributed photo captions and memories to “Mickey
Mantle: The American Dream Comes to Life,” which was a companion
book (written with Lewis Early) to a video of the same name.
After Mantle
died in 1995, Herskowitz compiled “A Hero All His
Life,” (HarperCollins, 1996), by the remaining members of the Mantle
family – his wife Merlyn, and sons Mickey Jr., David and Danny.
The first 31 pages however, was Mickey Sr.’s first person account,
told to Herskowitz earlier, of his drinking years, his failings as a
husband and a father, and his wish to do some things all over again.
While Mickey’s name is not on the book jacket as an author, these
31 pages were the most revealing, most honest words he ever contributed
to a book. Very hard to read with a dry eye.
Former Yankee
PR Director and TV producer Marty Appel is president of Marty Appel
Public Relations
and author
of 16 books, including “Now
Pitching for the Yankees.” He can be reached at info@appelpr.com.
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