Wait till next year : a memoir / Doris Kearns Goodwin

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Simon & Schuster , c1997Description: 261p. us ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 9780684824895
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 92 GOO
Summary: This memoir by the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian is a moving ode to her father and to their shared love of baseball. The word "recollections" in the subtitle rather than "reflections," say, is an apt designation of the book's content, which is charming and endearing, though does not allow access into the author's inner life. The baseball games of Goodwin's New York City youth are dramatically and beautifully narrated--it is refreshing to read about a girl's passion for the sport; her childhood love of the game and the three teams that played in the city in the 1950s is evident in every paragraph. But when Goodwin focuses on herself and her family apart from baseball, her mother was chronically ill and dies in the final pages of the book, she seems content to skim the surface of the story, with emotion held too deeply in check for what ought to have been the book's climax. Yet in the pages giving her childhood perspective on such things as race and the Army-McCarthy hearings, we behold the deep roots of this historian's success in her art.
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Libro - Monografía Biblioteca Pública de San Miguel de Allende, A.C. 92 GOO (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 004420

This memoir by the Pulitzer Prize-winning historian is a moving ode to her father and to their shared love of baseball. The word "recollections" in the subtitle rather than "reflections," say, is an apt designation of the book's content, which is charming and endearing, though does not allow access into the author's inner life. The baseball games of Goodwin's New York City youth are dramatically and beautifully narrated--it is refreshing to read about a girl's passion for the sport; her childhood love of the game and the three teams that played in the city in the 1950s is evident in every paragraph. But when Goodwin focuses on herself and her family apart from baseball, her mother was chronically ill and dies in the final pages of the book, she seems content to skim the surface of the story, with emotion held too deeply in check for what ought to have been the book's climax. Yet in the pages giving her childhood perspective on such things as race and the Army-McCarthy hearings, we behold the deep roots of this historian's success in her art.

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