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The Crowd Sounds Happy: A Story of Love, Madness, and Baseball by Nicholas Dawidoff
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The Crowd Sounds Happy: A Story of Love, Madness, and Baseball

by Nicholas Dawidoff

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This book is a thoughtful memoir of growing up with a very mentally ill father. After his parents divorced, Nicholas, his penny pitching mother and sister moved to New Haven but throughout his growing years the siblings went monthly to visit their father in New York City. Visits were tense and confusing to a young and growing child. Never feeling he knew how to fit in and Nicholas constantly looked for the meaningfully male figures to relate and guide him in growing up. When no consistent father figure immerged, he turned to baseball both playing the game and following major league teams – first the Mets and finally identifying with imperfect and ever losing Red Sox. When RS won the World Series in 2004 he saw the turn of his life and resolving his feelings about his father who at this point has passed away. Rating 4.5 as there were some confusing in time frames. ( )
  eembooks | Jul 16, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375400281, Hardcover)

From the author of the best-selling The Catcher Was a Spy, his most original work yet: a memoir of two cities (New Haven and New York), a family (troubled), a time (the 1970s), a boy who never quite fits in anywhere--and how baseball helps him find his place in America.

The Crowd Sounds Happy is the story of a spirited boy's coming-of-age in a doomed hometown, with a missing father, a single mother, and the professional ballplayers who gradually become the men in his life as he listens to them every night on the bedside radio. This is a childhood shaped by remarkable characters, foremost Nicholas Dawidoff's mother, a stoical, overwhelmed, enterprising woman committed to securing a more promising future for her children. It also tells, with the same arresting candor of Dawidoff's celebrated New Yorker magazine memoir of his father, what it's like to grow up with a disturbed, dangerous parent. Here are the events and places that come to define a young boy's outlook: a local playground, a kidnapping and a murder, rock 'n' roll, the steamy awkwardness of adolescence and first love, and the private world of baseball--the inner game as it has never been described before.

The Crowd Sounds Happy is a beautifully written, moving piece of personal history that transforms ordinary moments into literature.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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