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My Bat Boy Days: Lessons I Learned from the Boys of Summer | Steve Garvey | My Bat Boy Days
 
 


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 My Bat Boy Days: L...  

My Bat Boy Days: Lessons I Learned from the Boys of Summer
Steve Garvey

Scribner, 2008 - 160 pages

average customer review:based on 3 reviews
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On the evening of March 28, 1956, Steve Garvey's father, a Greyhound bus driver in the Tampa Bay area, asked his young son if he'd like to accompany him as he drove the Brooklyn Dodgers to a spring-training game with the New York Yankees. For Garvey, a baseball card collector and an aspiring Little Leaguer, the opportunity stretched beyond his wildest imagination and marked the beginning of a legendary career and life in baseball.

Garvey spent five years (1956-1961) as a bat boy, mostly for the Brooklyn Dodgers and briefly for the New York Yankees and the Detroit Tigers. The fact that he would go on to become a first baseman with the Los Angeles Dodgers, and one of the most successful players of his era, is like something out of a Hollywood script. My Bat Boy Days is his moving collection of indelible memories, fascinating profiles, and lessons learned -- about the game and about life -- from heroes such as Jackie Robinson, Sandy Koufax, and Mickey Mantle.

My Bat Boy Days is for the generation of fans who remember the Boys of Summer and for the generation who grew up watching Steve Garvey play for the love of the game. Garvey's story is perfect for sharing with children and grandchildren who are just now getting to know and love the game.


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Boy's Eye View of Baseball Greats and lessons learned

This is a delight.

I didn't know from 1956 to 1961, that Dodger great Steve Garvey was a bat boy for the Brooklyn Dodgers, New York Yankees and Detroit Tigers.

He tells stories about the following showing these virtues.

Pee Wee Reese leadership
Gil Hodges dignity
Carl Erskine honesty
Jackie Robinson passion
Duke Snider persistence
Roy Campanella compassion
Sandy Koufax faith
Mickey Mantle fortitude
Al Kaline perfection

It captures the excitement of baseball and would be good to read to kids.




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My Bat Boy Days

What a fun little book!

What we've got here is a short tale from Steve Garvey about how he worked as a bat boy for a few major league teams while he and his parents lived in Florida. His father drove a bus and was hired to drive around some big leaguers during spring training. The first team he ran into was the Brooklyn Dodgers from the Boys of Summer era of the team.

After this short tale of being asked to be the bat boy for a day, how much it meant to him as a boy, and how it has stuck with him ever since, Garvey speaks about a few individuals from the Boys of Summer teams as well as Mickey Mantle and Al Kaline. They are his heroes, pure and simple, and the story is presented in a pure in simple fashion.

Garvey chooses a certain superlative to describe each of the players he idolizes and talks about his experience with them that illustrate the descriptive word he's chosen. Also contained within the passages are biographical stats of the players which illustrate their statistical dominance as well as the more personal qualities that made them heroes to the Garv.

The prose is easy to read and relate to. For anyone that doesn't know the story of Roy Campanella or why Koufax had to retire at 31, these are also presented as part of the illustration of the virtues Garvey holds in such high esteem. It's a very short read but very much worth the time to take a peek into the idols of a man who was an idol for many youngsters once upon a time.


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My Bat Boy Days

Being a Dodger fan, I was really looking forward to reading this book. The book is interesting for the first twenty pages as Steve Garvey tells about his experiences as a Dodger Bat Boy. However, most of the book contains a chapter on Brooklyn Dodger players and Garvey tells very little about his experience with each player. The chapters contain mostly known facts about each player. The book ends with Garvey telling about his experiences with Mickey Mantle and Al Kaline which are interesting. But for a book only containing 146 pages, only around forty pages are about Garvey's days as a bat boy.


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