9781101933527 |
1101933526 |
9781101933534 |
1101933534 |
Available:*
Library | Material Type | Call Number | Shelf Location | Status | Item Holds |
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Searching... East Library | Children's Book | 796.357092 MANT | Children's-J-Biography | Searching... Unknown | Searching... Unavailable |
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Summary
Summary
The ONLY nonfiction picture book about New York Yankee Mickey Mantle, one of the greatest baseball players of all time.
From award-winning author Jonah Winter and #1 New York Times bestselling artist C. F. Payne comes this extraordinary picture-book biography that traces Mickey Mantle's unparalleled baseball career. He could run from home plate to first base in 2.9 seconds. He could hit a ball 540 feet-the longest home run in major league history. He was the greatest switch hitter ever to play the game. And he did it all despite broken bones, pulled muscles, strains, and sprains, from his shoulders to his feet. How did a poor country boy from Commerce, Oklahoma, become one of the greatest and most beloved baseball players of all time? This is the story.
Author Notes
Children's author and illustrator Jonah Winter was born in Fort Worth, Texas in 1962. He has created many popular books, including works about baseball and biographies of famous individuals including Frida Kahlo, Roberto Clemente, and Barack Obama.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 2-5-The cover image of a steely-eyed Mickey Mantle, bat aloft over his shoulder, sets the stage for an intimate look at the Hall of Famer. Mantle (1931-95) shattered records but struggled throughout his life to live up to expectations. ("Where Mickey came from, you had to be strong-tough, too.") Mantle battled childhood injuries and illness, but his father was determined to train him to be a ballplayer. In his teens, Mantle "shot up like Jack's beanstalk" and signed with the Yankees the day he graduated from high school. After a stint in the minors, he arrived in New York along with news of his speed and hitting prowess. He was slated to replace the great Joe DiMaggio ("The torch was being passed. [GULP] Greatness would be expected."). Winter relates the ups and downs of Mantle's career with zest: "Oh, if only, if only, Mickey could have stayed the way he was on that day, forever young, forever healthy, forever limitless in what he could do." Instead, there were slumps and injuries, including the horrific knee injury in the second game of the 1951 World Series. Mantle battled back: "What Mantle had was EMOTION, a FIRE inside that caused him to CRUSH the ball." Payne's mixed-media illustrations convey emotions and character. In one spread, DiMaggio and Mantle pose for photographers: well-mannered DiMaggio a half-step behind Mantle, who smiles shyly, eyes distant. Payne varies perspective to great effect: an image of Mantle's famous "tape-measure home run" zeroes in on the ball at the apex of its flight, with the ballpark far in the distance. VERDICT Highly recommended for school and public libraries, this nuanced look at one of baseball's iconic players has lessons for fans young and old.-Marilyn Taniguchi, Beverly Hills Public Library, CA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
In an engagingly conversational narrative laced with baseball lingo, Winter (You Never Heard of Casey Stengel?!) vividly traces Mickey Mantle's trajectory from a small child with a bone disease to one of America's most beloved baseball players. But even with success, he struggled. Winter explains how Mantle, after becoming a Yankee, famously damaged his knee on the field during the World Series ("the moment that would change his life") but went on to amass numerous records, "though every swing of the bat caused excruciating pain." Payne's (Miss Mary Reporting) handsome pencil-and-acrylic artwork blends 1950s naturalism with touches of caricature, while Winter keeps his focus on the man behind the records: "[Fans] knew Mickey wasn't perfect. But they also knew that to watch a guy do what he did, with that body, could take your breath away." Ages 4-8. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Winter, the author of picture-book biographies such as Joltin' Joe DiMaggio (2014) and You Never Heard of Casey Stengel?! (2016), adds another to his roster of books introducing legendary baseball players. Though Mantle's father taught him switch-hitting and groomed him to become a professional ballplayer, the boy was sickly and small for his age until, in his teens, he grew up fast and earned a reputation as a slugger. At 19, he became an outfielder for the Yankees. Though a leg injury slowed his speed a bit and left him in pain during every game, Mantle became an outstanding hitter. He still holds records for the most home runs, RBIs, extra base hits, runs, walks, and total bases in World Series history. The narrator's voice has a certain folksy charm that works well, given Mantle's background as a miner's son from a small community in Oklahoma. Payne's artwork, created with acrylic and pencil, transports readers to that setting as well as several ballparks, while portraying characters with energy and personality. A worthwhile addition to sports collections.--Phelan, Carolyn Copyright 2016 Booklist