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  • Baseball's Shining Season America's Pastime on the Brink of War

Baseball's Shining Season America's Pastime on the Brink of War

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Baseball's Shining Season

From National Book Award winner Martin W. Sandler and his son, a fascinating look at the intersection of baseball and society in America on the eve of World War II.

In 1941, as America stood on the brink of World War II, the country was in sore need of a diversion at home. They found exactly that on the baseball diamond, where the rivalry between the Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Yankees captivated fans as superstars Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio went head to head, breaking every record imaginable.

But the pastime known as "America's game" wasn't really a game that welcomed everyone: Black citizens were segregated into the widely dismissed Negro Leagues, and though women had played baseball for years, they struggled for acceptance and to establish a professional league of their own. As the country reached a turning point, so, too, did the sport of baseball--and after 1941, neither would ever be the same.

Through extensive archival photographs and thrilling accounts of the game and the country that became obsessed with it, Martin W. Sandler and Craig Sandler vividly portray the season that would change baseball forever.---from the publisher

192 pages                        978-1547607976                Ages 10-13

Keywords:  baseball, sports, segregation, prejudice and racism, World War II, social issues, social conditions, change, narrative nonfiction, 10 year old, 11 year old, 12 year old, 13 year old, 14 year old, American history

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