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Also includes: Lawrence Hogan (1)

Works by Lawrence D. Hogan

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Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1944
Gender
male

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Reviews

12 reviews
Purporting itself as "the" authoritative history of Black Baseball, this book fails at that. Quite simply because to do that in the space allotted to this book would be impossible. Too much history, too many people, teams and games for the complete tale to be told. Which is where this book fails ultimately. Too much story, not enough space to flesh it out.

Hogan attempts to start at the beginning of Black Baseball and go forward, but all he can accomplish is a cursory glance at best, and show more listing of facts at worst. The writing is uneven with some parts well done and others just shamble along, looking for something interesting to grab onto.

There also isn't enough background information about the Black Experience to put the entire story in context. Some is, but as it is more a story of people, more stories about people rather than organizations would have been more desirable to me.

This is an admirable undertaking, and one worth doing. That Hogan is passionate about the subject matter is undeniable, that he knows it backwards and forwards is also without question. However, the ways in which he tries to convey this leaves the reader cold. More storytelling and less fact listing. As it was, I was unable to finish the book. Reading it became a chore, and this pains me to say. Baseball, and Black Baseball in particular are subjects I enjoy, so I was predisposed to really like this book.

A complimentary copy of this book was provided by the Publisher.
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½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
While many books have been written about African-Americans and baseball, a glance at the fairly sketchy books written even ten years ago shows how much more remains to be told of their story. Shades of Glory is by no means a last word on the subject, but it is a great introduction for fans of the game and a fitting tribute to those who played in the shadows but shined nonetheless.

Hogan tells the familiar stories of Moses Walker, Josh Gibson and Satchel Paige, but the most interesting part show more of the book concentrates on the less well-known people who were instrumental in developing and organizing the Negro leagues and their predecessors. We tend to think of baseball as something that whites came up with and blacks adopted, but the truth is perhaps more complex. Black baseball and white baseball appear to have developed in parallel from the earliest games.

Hogan's presentation of his subject makes for an enjoyable reading experience. Anecdotes by and about black baseball players are included in boxes and the text is filled with interesting and rare photos -- which you would perhaps expect from a book published by National Geographic.

Hogan occasionally bogs the reader in detail, which may be inappropriate for a book clearly aimed at a general readership. However, the details are what make this book a very worthwhile synthesis of a half-century or more of research into an American tradition just as venerable -- and just as important -- as its white counterpart.
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Shades of Glory tells the history of African American Baseball.
It's obvious that there was a tremendous amount of research that went into this book.
I believed I was pretty familiar with a lot of the players and stories of the Negro Leagues
but I learned a lot from this work. Sprinkled throughout the book are numerous sidebars about
many of the best players. There were many tales I had not heard about, such as the legend of
Cool Papa Bell, about whom it's said could turn off the lights and be in show more bed before they went off.
I was surprised to learn that this story is actually based on true events!

The Negro Leagues were innovators in many ways. Did you know that the first night games were
played in the Negro Leagues?
Whereas most of the books I've read have dealt mostly with the players themselves and their
accomplishments, Shades of Glory details the history of the leagues themselves. How they came about,
the economic problems, how the various incarnations of leagues came and went. It details a lot of
the business side of the history that I knew nothing about. It's also quite enlightening as to just
how much baseball brought communities together in both the white communities and very much in the
black communities. There was a time in the past when baseball played a huge part of American life.
Towns and companies had teams and huge numbers of people followed their local teams.

Sadly, as much as Jackie Robinson and the integration of Major League Baseball did for our country,
there were also casualties. The Negro Leagues quickly died due to mostly economic reasons; the fans
started going to see the Major League teams with black players and not following the Negro League teams.
Black-owned hotels and other businesses lost a lot of business once the other businesses started opening
their doors. But most of the old negro players who missed out on playing in the majors don't express
a lot of regret. They are thankful for getting to play baseball!

Shades of Glory goes much more into the business side of the history of the Negro Leagues than
it does the actual players and their statistics, but it's filled with some remarkable accounts and really
opens your eyes as to the struggles of the African American players in the early days of baseball.
I would definitely recommend it to anyone interested in baseball history and some of the greatest players
who never made it to the major leagues.
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
From the open fields of rural America to inner-city streets and sandlots, baseball and the boys of summer have been America’s feel-good obsession. That this pastime was played out in parallel, necessitated by the segregationist policies of America in the 19th and 20th centuries, is still so hard to understand.

In his foreword to Shades of Glory: The Negro Leagues and the Story of African-American Baseball by Lawrence D. Hogan, baseball historian Jules Tygiel writes “The realm of black show more baseball was a vibrant and colorful one. It offered a panorama of innovation and enterprise, entertainment and excitement, and unparalleled athletic achievement.”

This book brings alive the history of black baseball, from slaves playing on plantations in the pre-Civil War South to the first organized games of the mid-19th century and the glory days of the Negro leagues in the 1920s, ’30s and ’40s. This book profiles the players, owners and fans that made baseball come alive for generations of African Americans.

All the heroes of Negro League baseball are here. Satchel Paige, Cool Papa Bell, Buck O'Neill, Josh Gibson up until the arrival of Jackie Robinson, Roy Campenella and Monte Irwin and how their breaking the color barrier effectively put an end to Negro League baseball.

There are stats of ball players and organizations at the back of the book, although they are missing in this pre-release edition.

The book is an important contribution to the history of baseball in America and a sensitive tribute to the players and teams that wrote a unique chapter in the story of baseball and American culture.
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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Works
3
Members
157
Popularity
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Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
12
ISBNs
9

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