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Hank Aaron (1934–2021)

Author of I Had a Hammer: The Hank Aaron Story

6+ Works 443 Members 1 Review

About the Author

Includes the name: Hank Aaron, et al.

Image credit: ConspiracyofHappiness

Works by Hank Aaron

I Had a Hammer: The Hank Aaron Story (1991) 341 copies, 1 review
Aaron (1974) 40 copies
Hitting the Aaron way (1974) 5 copies

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Aaron, Henry Louis
Birthdate
1934-02-05
Date of death
2021-01-22
Gender
male
Occupations
baseball player
Organizations
Atlanta Braves
Awards and honors
Baseball Hall of Fame
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Mobile, Alabama, USA
Associated Place (for map)
Alabama, USA

Members

Reviews

1 review
Years before Henry Aaron was even born, before Babe Ruth himself had finalized the career home run record it was Aaron’s fate to challenge, his father had scoped out the dimensions of what lay ahead. In 1928, Herbert Aaron climbed a tree to see the Babe play at Mobile’s Hartwell Field and swore “he saw Ruth hit a ball into the coal car of a train and they didn’t retrieve the ball until the train pulled into New Orleans.”

As much as Aaron’s exploits are inevitably associated with show more the near-mythic Ruth, experts from the era when Hank became a star thought his hitting style most resembled that of Rogers Hornsby, a hitter who with Honus Wagner and Stan Musial was one of the three greatest National League batters of the era before major-league baseball allowed black players on its fields. Hornsby was second only to Ty Cobb in lifetime batting average, and if Aaron had possessed less talent for slugging he might have challenged Ty’s hits record instead. But Aaron was beyond category. A famous quote, variously recorded by history, had it that “trying to sneak a fastball past Hank Aaron is like trying to sneak the sunrise past a rooster.”

Written with Lonnie Wheeler, Hank Aaron’s I Had a Hammer gives baseball fans an interesting story of his life. And having myself been in the left field seats for one of his 755 dingers, I am glad to have found out what made it all possible.

Note: I’ve read that Howard Bryant’s biography of Aaron, published 19 years after this book, claims it’s a myth Hank batted cross-handed when young. But in I Had a Hammer Aaron himself says he did. I know which book I’m believing.
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½

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Statistics

Works
6
Also by
11
Members
443
Popularity
#55,290
Rating
4.2
Reviews
1
ISBNs
11

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