Guide to Baseball Short Stories: F

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Not exactly maudlin, but it lies in that general direction.


Interesting premise, realized vaguely.





Light and wisecracking story that sets itself against the typical sport story, opening "This is not a baseball story. The grandstand does not rise as one man and shout itself hoarse with joy" (58).





Agreeable character study anecdote.


The Black Sox are explicitly invoked here; long after 1919-20, the fear of a Fix continued to reverberate through pulp baseball fiction.


Tough-as-nails prose style enamels a pretty weak story.


When rookie Johnny Hughes reaches the majors, his first clue that the big time isn't so tough is that "some of the fellows even wore ice-cream pants to dinner!" (34)


Nice character sketch here of Elmira player-manager Rabbit Maranville.


Clever, engaging yarn.