RED SOX CENTURY: One Hundred Years of Red Sox Baseball.

AuthorNolan, Martin F.
PositionReview

RED SOX CENTURY: One Hundred Years of Red Sox Baseball By Glenn Stout and Richard A. Johnson Houghton Mifflin, $40.00

IN 1919, FRESH FROM MUSTERING out of the U.S. Army, my father left his village in Maine for Boston, an exciting city with an exciting baseball team. The Red Sox reigned as world champions, having won their fifth World Series in 1918. With Irish luck, he arrived just in time for Babe Ruth's last season, and he was hooked.

At Fenway Park, on the radio and television, he and his progeny took a seasonal ride to the giddy heights of 'Almost," to the last week, the last game, the last playoff (in 1948 and 1978), and the seventh game of the World Series (in 1946, 1967 and 1975). Neil Nolan died at 87 in 1985, a year before you-know-what dribbled under you-know-whose legs in the sixth game of a World Series game played you-know-where. I tell this shaggy-mutt tale because some of my friends have dined out on my punchline to this dynastic saga: "The Red Sox killed my father, and now they're coming after me." The phrase was much in use in Boston after Bucky Dent did his imitation of Babe Ruth in 1978.

In season and out, hope springs eternal from New England's rocky soil. This wonderfully irrational exuberance requires documentation. It has arrived handsomely and in vivid detail in Red Sox Century. Beautiful black-and-white photos and sound research into the icons and zanies who have populated Fenway illustrate what the wistful agony has been all about. Glenn Stout and Richard A. Johnson provide a clinical autopsy of gonfalonia interruptus.

They are also calm exorcists. Red Sox Nation is a Transylvanian village, awaiting the curse of the Bambino at every full moon. The authors approach what happened in 1920 differently: "If there is any kind of curse that haunts the Boston Red Sox, it's not one that has anything to do with the sale of Ruth. Rather, it is the way history has been misused to provide excuses for the real failures that have haunted the team."

While they prove their thesis, the authors wisely do not try to restore the image of Harry Frazee, the starstruck club owner whose name in our household ranked with that of Bendict Arnold and Judas Iscariot. Red Sox owners have often been unwise. A previous owner, John I. Taylor, impulsively traded...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT