Reed Browning
Author of The War of the Austrian Succession
About the Author
Reed Browning is professor of history at Kenyon College
Works by Reed Browning
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Browning, Reed
- Birthdate
- 1938-08-26
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Dartmouth College (AB)
Yale University (PhD) - Occupations
- distinguished professor (History)
- Organizations
- Kenyon College
- Awards and honors
- Kenyon College Trustee Teaching Excellence Award (2000)
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Gambier, Ohio, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Ohio, USA
Members
Reviews
I think that nobody writes baseball better than Reed Browning. He always offers a smooth narrative with just enough statistical analysis and informed opinion to persuade a reader as to the validity of the several viewpoints on points of contention in baseball's historical community. In this case his subject is baseball's winningest pitcher, Old Cy Young. I've seen many an 'untouchable' baseball record threatened or broken in my day, but Young's wins record is truly one that will endure--try show more to imagine a pitcher these days winning twenty games a season for twenty years, and then reflect upon the fact that said pitcher would still have to pick up another 100 wins somewhere. Young's record for most innings pitched is, if anything, even more unbreakable. The narrative of Young's life and career is broken by a few interstitial chapters which treat of discussions of various life-and-times issues placing Young in the context of the eras in which he played. Young was a genial man who wore his fame rather lightly, and this book gives a very full picture of that as well as of his career. show less
This book chronicles the 1924 baseball season concisely and interestingly, alternating chapters on the course of the season's field play with chapters elucidating more general matters such as the economics of the teams, the game experience for the fans, and the lives of the players. The author's prose is a model of precision; he can bring a player who was just a name to life by deploying a phrase or even a lone adjective. In Utopia there would be a book of this quality for every season.
In the 1890s and 1900s, we learn from Reed Browning’s Cy Young: A Baseball Life, baseball players sometimes were reported by the press to be suffering from malaria. While that would be a surprising development today, back then malaria was widespread in the U.S.
However, the etiology of these cases was unusual and for that reason not reported by the press. The players, it seems, were struck by the disease after spending time in enjoyment of the company of frolicsome women rather than show more noxious mosquitos. By contrast, Cy Young, a blissfully married man whose love for his wife was faithful and unstinting, never in his twenty-two seasons suffered from ballplayer’s “malaria.”
Those were the times of seeing between the lines. Appropriate for a sport like baseball.
These and other details give interest to Reed Browning’s biography of the pitching legend famous in name though not in image. It’s a well-documented story plus a fair assessment of Young’s achievement and provides an excellent picture of what is was like to pitch back in the 1890s and 1900s. It’s also a look at what was then a still-developing sport—half of Cy Young’s career was over before the American League even came into existence. A good book for historically minded baseball fans. show less
However, the etiology of these cases was unusual and for that reason not reported by the press. The players, it seems, were struck by the disease after spending time in enjoyment of the company of frolicsome women rather than show more noxious mosquitos. By contrast, Cy Young, a blissfully married man whose love for his wife was faithful and unstinting, never in his twenty-two seasons suffered from ballplayer’s “malaria.”
Those were the times of seeing between the lines. Appropriate for a sport like baseball.
These and other details give interest to Reed Browning’s biography of the pitching legend famous in name though not in image. It’s a well-documented story plus a fair assessment of Young’s achievement and provides an excellent picture of what is was like to pitch back in the 1890s and 1900s. It’s also a look at what was then a still-developing sport—half of Cy Young’s career was over before the American League even came into existence. A good book for historically minded baseball fans. show less
3813. Cy Young A Baseball Life, by Reed Browning (read 15 Oct 2003) Ever since I read historian Reed Browning's The War of the Austrian Succession I have wanted to read this book. Cy Young was born 29 Mar 1867 and died 4 Nov. 1955, having won more major league games than any other pitcher ever has or ever will. The book is very well and carefully written and tells well of Young's career and life. There are lots of footnotes and a good bibliography--so it is not a sportswriter's thrown show more together biography. I enjoyed this solid baseball book muchly. show less
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Members
- 231
- Popularity
- #97,642
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 14














