I liked this book, but wow, was it detailed. It took me weeks to get through (which is unusual for me) and at times I must admit to skimming some pages.
The story is about the 1951 National League pennant race where Bobby Thomson of the New York Giants hit a home run off Ralph Branca of the Brooklyn Dodgers to win the playoff game that brought the Giants into the World Series. Prager gives a great history of baseball in telling the story, describing well the role baseball played in America's psyche, particularly in New York.
One theme he explores is the sign-stealing that may have enabled Bobby Thomson's home run. His style was to stipulate early in the book that there was spying, then weave extensive biographical information about all the characters in the story, including the electrician who first set up the sign-stealing system and the bat boy who slapped hands with Thomson after his homer. Prager also focused on the archtypes of the "hero and goat" that Thomson and Branca took on, following their lives after the game.
Overall, I liked the book and found many of the themes very accessible. Sign-stealing brought to mind last season's Patriots. And Ralph Branca became to Brooklyn what Bill Buckner had been to Boston. I loved how well Prager described New York's attachment to baseball. I just thought the detail in some cases was a little overwhelming and I could have done without the 100+ pages of endnotes as an airport read.
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