Teammates, The: A Portrait of a Friendship
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Teammates, The: A Portrait of a Friendship

Teammates, The: A Portrait of a Friendship
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Teammates, The: A Portrait of a Friendship

by David Halberstam
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Hyperion (2004-05-05)
ISBN: 0786888679
EAN: 9780786888672
Dewy Decimal #: 796.3570922
Paperback: 224 pages
Release Date: 2004-04-28
SKU: 41663
Condition: Collectable Like New
Comments: THE SOFTBACK BOOK! HYPERION, 2003. EXACTLY AS PICTURED. THE UNABRIDGED 1ST EDITION. SOFTBACK BOOK AND PAGES ARE NEW! Has a blank label on front page. Rapid shipping w/FREE tracking. GREAT PACKAGING . Air Mail. BL


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
Now in paperback, the New York Times bestselling The Teammates -- David Halberstam's stirring tribute to the golden age of baseball and to friendship.

The Teammates is the profoundly moving story of four great baseball players who have made the passage from sports icons -- when they were young and seemingly indestructible -- to men dealing with the vulnerabilities of growing older. At the core of the book is the friendship of these four very different men -- Boston Red Sox teammates Bobby Doerr, Dominic DiMaggio, Johnny Pesky, and Ted Williams -- who remained close for more than sixty years.

The book starts out in early October 2001, when Dominic DiMaggio and Johnny Pesky begin a 1,300-mile trip by car to visit their beloved friend Ted Williams, whom they know is dying. Bobby Doerr, the fourth member of this close group -- "my guys," Williams used to call them -- is unable to join them. Doerr is back in Oregon tending to his wife of sixty-three years, who has suffered a second stroke. Acclaimed author David Halberstam has given us a book -- filled with historical details and first-hand accounts -- about baseball and about something more, the richness of friendship.

Amazon.com Review
As baseball legend Ted Williams lay dying in Florida, his old Boston Red Sox teammates Johnny Pesky and Dom DiMaggio piled into a car and drove 1,300 miles to see their friend. Another member of the close-knit group, Bobby Doerr, remained in Oregon to tend to his wife who had suffered a stroke. Besides providing a poignant travelogue of the elderly Pesky and DiMaggio's trip, David Halberstam's The Teammates goes back in time to profile the men as young ballplayers. Although it is enlightening to learn about Doerr, Pesky, and DiMaggio, the leader of the group and star of the book is Williams. Halberstam portrays the notoriously moody and difficult Williams as a complex man: driven by a rough childhood and a fiercely competitive nature to become perhaps the greatest pure hitter of all time while also being a magnetic personality and loving friend. While there is nothing exceptionally unusual about old men who have stayed friends (plenty of people stay friends, after all), baseball gives this particular relationship a unique makeup. Unlike most friendships, that of Williams, Doerr, Pesky, and DiMaggio was viewed all summer long by hooting, hollering Red Sox fans. As such, their bond is forged both of individual accomplishment, win-loss records, numerous road trips, and, since they played for the Red Sox, annual doses of disappointment. Halberstam, author of Summer of '49 and October 1964 is the ideal writer to tell two equally intriguing stories, both rich in America's pastime. Although he occasionally drops himself into the narrative, one expects that of Halberstam and gladly accepts it in exchange for the highly readable exposition infused with poetic majesty that has become his trademark. --John Moe


Customer Reviews


A Warm-Hearted Look At Enduring Friends
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-11-07


This a wonderfully written book that leaves you with a very warm and nostalgic feeling. Yeah, it's about four great players for the Boston Red Sox but it's so much more. I'm afraid to say much more because it may sound trite or have too many cliches. However, it really is a story, as advertised, about an enduring friendship among four guys.

The more you know about some baseball history, like the Enos Slaughter scamper home from first base in the 1946 series, the more you might appreciate some of the stories but one needn't know anything about the sport to be touched by this book. In fact, I was so impressed with this story, I loaned it to a die-hard Yankee fan who hates the Sox and, he, too, said it was a fantastic book.

The ending of this book, when the players go down to Florida and meet a dying Ted Williams, will haunt me forever. David Halberstam certainly knows how to turn a phrase and get a reader involved. It's hard for me to sit for any length of time, but I couldn't put this book down.

I am pleased to say hat as of this review, the other three ballplayers - Johnny Pesky, Bobby Doerr and Dom DiMaggio - are still all alive and kicking. I have such respect for those three men, after reading this book.


founding brothers
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-08-24


The late David Halberstam's insightful baseball writing has been a boon for fans with long memories. There are more of them attached to this odd American sport than any other. A penchant for statistics and scars that never heal are practically the calling card of those of us who are drawn, inexorably, to the diamonds with every new Spring.

This 2003 tribute to four skinny kids on the 1946 Boston Red Sox is not so much about the game as about the uncommon friendship that linked four of its iconic players. Halberstam has helped us to understand the grace that made Bobby Doer a lifetime interpreter of the gifted, irascible, and troubled Ted Williams; about the fealty to the sports unwritten rules that moved Johnny Pesky to accept the blame for a ball he never held (at least according to Halberstam's reconstruction) until ten years after the true culprit had gone to his grave; and about the tragedy of a season that came so close to glory but ended up heralding a generation (these are short in baseball time) of mediocrity in the precursor of what we have come to know as Red Sox Nation.

Halberstam tells the story with an instinct for the game's heroic rhythms, most of which pass unnoticed by all but the most committed observers. He skirts the edge of hagiography by taking Doerr's, Dimaggio's, and Pesky's 'lite' version of the book's dying, central figure as accurate description. This is what friends do for friends. Halberstam almost does it too, but pulls out before falling prey to the understandable urge to see whether a porcelain saint might just be constructed from Williams' legacy.

Alas, it cannot.

That friends, sometimes, stick together in the way these four teammates did--and do, those who survive--is a larger story than baseball. Yet in the telling of it, Halberstam has illuminated the game as well.

We are the better for it on both counts.


A Remarkable Bond Like No Other
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-07-10


Admittedly, I'm a huge Yankee fan. But beyond that, I'm a baseball fan, and Halberstam does a great job of getting me to feel in my heart for this great group of guys and the relationships they had with each other. He takes you through the major milestones of their careers and relationships and makes you feel like you're one of the boys and share in their joys and hardships. If you're not a fan of baseball and brotherhood, then you won't enjoy this book. But if you are, you won't be able to put it down.


Insight into a different era...
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-05-06


I read this book on the recommendation of a client and was impressed! Halberstam does an excellent job of weaving the tale of four teammates forever bound by baseball, Boston, and their friendship. Each has his own story and personality from the larger-than-life Ted Williams to the reserved Bobby Doerr all revealed with masterful writing. A must read for any Red Sox or baseball fan. Because of the masterful writing I will be reading more of David Halberstam.
October 1964
Summer of '49 (P.S.)
The Best and the Brightest


No Magic
Rating (2)
Date: 2008-03-19


There's a good bit of information in this book. But I just did not perceive that the author effectively conveyed the "magic" that the story seemed to promise. I came away feeling like I had some more facts about these players but just none of the 'warm and fuzzy' that I expected.

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