
Furman Bisher (1918–2012)
Author of Strange But True Baseball Stories
Works by Furman Bisher
Associated Works
Baseball digest vol. 29, no. 1 (January 1970) — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Bisher, James Furman
- Birthdate
- 1918-11-04
- Date of death
- 2012-03-18
- Gender
- male
- Education
- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (1938)
- Occupations
- sportswriter
- Organizations
- Atlanta Journal-Constitution
- Awards and honors
- Member, Georgia Sports Hall of Fame (inducted 1990)
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Denton, North Carolina, USA
- Place of death
- Fayetteville, Georgia, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Disclaimer: I am not much of a baseball fan, or even a sports fan, and no doubt would have enjoyed more of this book if I was. But, since my kids go to school in Granite Falls, NC, and I live just five miles from the field where The Rocks played... I had to read it.
As the subtitle makes clear, "The Rocks" is the story of the losingest team in professional baseball history. The Granite Falls Rocks played in the lower minor leagues in 1951; and that's it. They lost 96 games, and won only 14. show more Most of this short book details that story.
But the team actually has another, more positive claim to fame as well. In the last few weeks of the season, they were short five players, and the team owners hired five black men to play on the team. Jackie Robinson had already broken the color barrier, but no black players had been hired to any team in the South. The best part of the story is that nobody paid it much attention. The other players were glad to have them on the team, the owners wanted them, the fans (the few that were still coming to games after such a dismal season) didn't care, and the opposing teams never cared.
When Browning is telling a story, it's not bad, but there were way too many pages that got bogged down in baseball statistics for me to really enjoy the book. show less
As the subtitle makes clear, "The Rocks" is the story of the losingest team in professional baseball history. The Granite Falls Rocks played in the lower minor leagues in 1951; and that's it. They lost 96 games, and won only 14. show more Most of this short book details that story.
But the team actually has another, more positive claim to fame as well. In the last few weeks of the season, they were short five players, and the team owners hired five black men to play on the team. Jackie Robinson had already broken the color barrier, but no black players had been hired to any team in the South. The best part of the story is that nobody paid it much attention. The other players were glad to have them on the team, the owners wanted them, the fans (the few that were still coming to games after such a dismal season) didn't care, and the opposing teams never cared.
When Browning is telling a story, it's not bad, but there were way too many pages that got bogged down in baseball statistics for me to really enjoy the book. show less
Couple of my favorites:
One from the intro -"Experience has taught me that it warms the heart to be positive than negative, even with a twist of humor or a pull of the leg. Be thankful, not just at Thanksgiving. Any time of the year is a good time to be grateful.
Second one - "I'm old enough to appreciate the young and young enough to appreciate the old." - Furman Bisher
One from the intro -"Experience has taught me that it warms the heart to be positive than negative, even with a twist of humor or a pull of the leg. Be thankful, not just at Thanksgiving. Any time of the year is a good time to be grateful.
Second one - "I'm old enough to appreciate the young and young enough to appreciate the old." - Furman Bisher
Lists
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 11
- Also by
- 5
- Members
- 145
- Popularity
- #142,478
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 10


