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Loading... Into My Own: The Remarkable People and Events That Shaped a Lifeby Roger Kahn
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I've long admired Roger Kahn's baseball writing. For a while he had the best sportswriting job in the country, covering the Brooklyn Dodgers before they left New York. This book, actually a memoir, covers those years, tells us how he got there, and continues with chapters about the various people and events that have influenced his life. I gained a greater knowledge and respect for Kahn reading of his friendship and regard for such people as Jackie Robinson, Pee Wee Reese, Robert Frost, Gene McCarthy and others. This advance reader's edition is chock-full of typos, which I trust were fixed for the final publication. It's also chock -full of great stories and good writing, as always with Kahn. The only smudge in an otherwise fine book is the chapter, "Rescuing Roger", in which he details his son Roger's troubled life and suicide at 23. I can imagine no greater pain, and even 20 years later the anguish must be horrible to live through. But I am still troubled by a section early in the chapter, in which he receives his son's suicide note. The first paragraph is a short message to Roger Sr., about the son's own pain. The second is a P.S. message: "As my mother is worth neither my time nor a postage stamp, send her a copy of my death certificate, as you would my grades." A terribly angry and hateful thing to write, and Kahn's son by an earlier marriage mercifully went against Kahn's inclination and showed Roger Jr.'s mother, Kahn's ex-wife, an edited version of the note. So why now does Kahn reveal its full contents? I have to hope that Alice was deceased by the time this book came out, because this strikes me otherwise as an unforgiveably vengeful action against his ex-wife, no matter how troubled the marriage was. I can't remember if he mentioned her death anywhere in the book. But even if she were, I still can't imagine that this passage would not be painful to others in the family. This, for me, mars an otherwise fine and enjoyable book by one of my favorite baseball writers. ( )Review by Ron Kaplan appears on Bookreporter.com no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 07 Jan 2010 04:04:33 -0500)
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