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Willie Mays: The Life, The Legend Kindle Edition
Willie Mays (1931–2024) was arguably the greatest player in baseball history, revered for the passion he brought to the game. He began as a teenager in the Negro Leagues, became a cult hero in New York, and was the headliner in Major League Baseball’s bold expansion to California. He was a blend of power, speed, and stylistic bravado that enraptured fans for more than two decades. Author James Hirsch reveals the man behind the player.
Mays was a transcendent figure who received standing ovations in enemy stadiums and who, during the turbulent civil rights era, urged understanding and reconciliation. More than his records, his legacy is defined by the pure joy that he brought to fans and the loving memories that have been passed to future generations so they might know the magic and beauty of the game. With meticulous research and drawing on interviews with Mays himself as well as with close friends, family, and teammates, Hirsch presents a brilliant portrait of one of America’s most significant cultural icons.
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Considered to be "as monumental--and enigmatic--a legend as American sport has ever seen" (Sports Illustrated), Willie Mays is arguably the greatest player in baseball history, still revered for the passion he brought to the game. He began as a teenager in the Negro Leagues, became a cult hero in New York, and was the headliner in Major League Baseball's bold expansion to California. With 3,283 hits, 660 home runs, and 338 stolen bases, he was a blend of power, speed, and stylistic bravado that enraptured fans for more than two decades. Now, in the first biography authorized by and written with the cooperation of Willie Mays, James Hirsch reveals the man behind the player.
Willie is perhaps best known for "The Catch"--his breathtaking over-the-shoulder grab in the 1954 World Series. But he was a transcendent figure who received standing ovations in enemy stadiums and who, during the turbulent civil rights era, urged understanding and reconciliation. More than his records, his legacy is defined by the pure joy that he brought to fans and the loving memories that have been passed to future generations so they might know the magic and beauty of the game. With meticulous research, and drawing on interviews with Mays himself as well as with close friends, family, and teammates, Hirsch presents a complex portrait of one of America's most significant cultural icons.
A Conversation with Author James Hirsch
Q: As a baseball fan, what were your impressions of Willie Mays before you first approached him regarding a book?
A: I never actually saw him play, but I grew up in St. Louis, and Cardinal announcer Jack Buck used to describe Mays as "the greatest player I ever saw" and speak of him with such reverence that the name itself was pure magic. Over the years, I read some stories about him and saw some video clips, and my impression was of a player who had mastered all parts of the game. As it happened, that impression didn't change. In considering who the greatest player of all time was, I conclude that Babe Ruth was baseball's most dominant player while Willie Mays was its greatest master.
Q: The biography includes a rich description and analysis of “The Catch”--the play in the 1954 World Series for which Willie Mays is perhaps best known. What were your sources for this passage? How much time did you spend researching and crafting it? Was it more, or less, difficult to write than any other given passage in the book?
A: Willie himself has discussed "The Catch" many times over the years, including in the locker room immediately after the game. The key, for me, was to capture not just his athletic skill but the true artistry of the moment. I found an interview that Willie gave in the 1990s in which he walked through the mental calculations he made while running toward the centerfield fence, trying to determine how he was going to throw the ball before the runner on second could tag up and score. It was Willie's most scientific, but also his most elegant, account of the play.
Beyond filling in the gaps with Willie in person, I interviewed as many people I could find who saw the play, including players (Alvin Dark, Monte Irvin, Al Rosen) and sportswriters (Roger Kahn, Robert Creamer), and I culled the many descriptions of it that have been recorded, including from the hitter Vic Wertz and the second base umpire, Jocko Conlan. All told, I had about 35 eyewitness accounts. Given the wealth of information--Arnold Hano wrote an entire book about "The Catch"--the biggest challenge was finding some fresh angles.
It was often said that "The Catch" was Willie's signature play. But it was more than that. It established the Willie Mays brand name--to this day, you can go to any ball field, watch a kid make a catch over his shoulder, and someone will scream, "Willie Mays!" I don't believe there is anything comparable with any athlete in any sport. What's also important is that "The Catch" now lives in the film footage that is played over and over on TV or on computers. The film is in black-and-white, but the following year, the World Series was filmed in color. Symbolically, we passed into the modern era--and indeed, Willie played most of his career in what we would consider the modern era, defined in part by the relocation of teams, World Series night games, and the widening financial divide between players and their fans. Yet Willie's defining moment placed him in that earlier era--the black-and-white television age, if you will--when players were more integrated into their communities, World Series games started in the afternoon, and owners didn't betray fans. Willie Mays, through the constant showing of "The Catch," has become our touchstone to that bygone era.
Q:How would you sum up Mays’s legacy, both within the game of baseball and outside of it?
A: That was the single most important question I wanted to answer, and I discovered it when I went to speak to my son's second-grade class. After talking to the students about how to write stories, I asked how many of them had heard of Willie Mays. I was shocked by how many hands went up--most of the boys, and some of the girls. I asked how they knew about Willie. Some had seen "The Catch" on ESPN, but many told me that their fathers, or their grandfathers, or their uncles had told them about "the great Willie Mays." The kids didn't really know anything about Willie, except that he represented this platonic ideal of baseball perfection. It was then that I realized Willie's legacy is not his numbers, his records, or the games he helped win. It is the pure joy that he brought to those fans who watched him and the loving memories that have been passed to future generations so they might know the magic and beauty of the game.
Q:Why do you think Willie Mays finally agreed to be interviewed extensively for a biography?
A:Timing was part of the reason. Willie was 77 when I first met him, and I believe he was ready to reflect on the totality of his life and encourage those around him to do so well. I was a complete stranger to Willie, but I now believe that helped me. Willie is extraordinarily proud of his life--quite mindful of that trajectory, from a poor, Depression-era black kid from the Deep South to someone who now rides on Air Force One with the president. While I asked Willie to do something that he really doesn't enjoy--talk about himself--I believe that he wanted an outsider to independently validate his accomplishments as well as disappointments.
Q:What was your most unexpected discovery while researching and writing Willie Mays?
A:Willie made baseball look so easy that most people assumed he just took the field and breezed through the season. Henry Aaron told me that some of the black players, who had to work extra hard just to keep their spots on the roster, resented Willie because he made baseball look so effortless. The fact is, even Willie's peers had no appreciation of his sacrifices, both physical and emotional. Those sacrifices caused Willie to be hospitalized on several occasions during his career--he was simply too tired to compete, and the pressure of being Willie Mays was at times too great even for Willie Mays. That was a surprise, but the revelation also made Willie a more human and sympathetic figure.
Look Inside Willie Mays (Photos Courtesy of Willie Mays)
Click on each image below to see a larger view
Mays met President Obama before his
candidacy for the White House, and fulfilled
one of his dreams by accompanying the
President on Air Force one to attend the 2009 All-Star Game in St. Louis.
Willie (bottom row, fourth from the left) was
only fifteen when he played briefly
for the Chattanooga Choo Choos.
Beyond baseball, Mays wants his legacy to
be his Say Hey Foundation, which is
dedicated to supporting organizations
for children.
Mae Allen Mays set aside her career as a
social worker to be Willie's life partner
and soul mate.
Mays's long history of helping children reflects
his belief that kids, unlike adults, will always
appreciate your efforts and will never betray you.
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
From Booklist
Review
"Willie Mays had everything--except a first-rate biography. That omission has now been addressed by James S. Hirsch, who has produced a piece of artistry worhty of Mays in center field."--Bloomberg.com
"James Hirsch has written an enormously entertaining and wide-ranging biography--a fitting tribute to Mays . . . and a thoughtful account of the complex and often misunderstood man. . . . True baseball fans will delight in the author's edge-of-seat game reports and picture-perfect descriptions of Mays' superlative talents. . . This is a superb baseball book, but it's also a riveting narrative of Mays' life and times."--Seattle Times
"A terrific new biography . . . [an] always engaging and enlightening book . . . A wonderful introduction to the magical life of one of the finest athletes ever."--San Francisco Chronicle
"Hirsch has produced a masterful biography that has the same freshness and excitement that Mays generated as a player. All the highlights are there in shining, solid detail. It's a must-read for any baseball fan."--Tampa Bay Online
"James S. Hirsch compellingly recounts Mays' career . . . giving even Mays' iconic moments, such as 'The Catch' in the 1954 World Series, a sense of tension as if they were unfolding anew. . . . Great baseball reading, by an accomplished writer . . . about a wondrous ballplayer and man with gifts beyond the diamond."--Associated Press
"The book, documenting Mays’ rise from Negro leagues star to major league icon, also serves as a history lesson."--USA Today
"Tautly written . . . Mr. Hirsch captures Willie’s greatness on the field.”--Wall Street Journal
“Does a better job than any book before of getting at what it means to be Willie Mays.”—Sports Illustrated
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
On May 24, 1951, a young center fielder who had dazzled crowds in the minor leagues left Sioux City, Iowa, traveling light: a change of clothes and some toiletries, his glove, his spikes, and his two favorite thirty-four-ounce Adirondack bats. The twenty-year-old Alabaman was driven to the airport in Omaha, Nebraska, where he bought a ticket from United Airlines for an all-night journey, landing in New York early the following day. He had been there once before, three years earlier, to play in the Polo Grounds with the Birmingham Black Barons. On that team the veterans had protected him, instructing the youngster on how to dress, act, and play ball; on how to represent his team, his city, and his race. But now, on a sunny morning at La Guardia Airport, Willie Mays slid into the back seat of a taxi and pressed his face against the window, alone. He had never seen so many people walk so fast in his life.
Mays was driven to the midtown offices of his employer, the New York Giants, and promptly escorted inside. At 5-foot-11 and 160 pounds, he did not yet have the sculpted body that would later evoke comparisons to Michelangelo's finest work. He was taut and fluid, but not physically imposing. Only his rippling forearms and massive hands, each one large enough to grip four baseballs, hinted at his crushing strength.
Mays entered the office of Horace C. Stoneham, the Giants' shy but personable owner, who was rarely seen in the clubhouse or interviewed by reporters. He had thinning hair, a ruddy complexion, and thick-framed glasses, and while his counterpart at the Brooklyn Dodgers -- Walter O'Malley -- had the aura of a corporate chieftain, Stoneham more closely resembled a rumpled bank manager who preferred the intimacy of his office to the bustle of the lobby. Alcohol was his most notorious vice, but undue loyalty wasn't far behind. He liked to hire family members and fellow Irishmen and hated to trade or cut Giants who had lost their usefulness. But give him his due: he cared deeply about his players, about their finances, their family, and their well-being, and he would help them as he would his own children.
He also needed good players, and he never needed one more than he needed Willie Mays.
The Giants were a family business, and Stoneham was only thirty-two when he inherited the team after his father's death in 1936. At the time, the Giants were the National League's preeminent franchise, having won eleven pennants and four World Series since the turn of the century. They captured consecutive pennants in Horace's first two years at the helm -- clubs essentially assembled by his father -- but the team grew stale, fan interest declined, and championships became a memory.
In 1951, after a dismal start, the Giants risked, not just a losing season, but irrelevance or even ruin. The franchise had lost money in each of the last three years and had been eclipsed by New York's other baseball teams. Their blood rival, the Brooklyn Dodgers, had won three pennants in the last decade, with Ebbets Field featuring social history as well as fierce competition. Since 1947, the Dodgers had been led by Jackie Robinson, whose breaking of the color barrier, combined with electrifying play, made for riveting theater. Yankee Stadium, meanwhile, was its own showcase of dominance and glamour: five World Series championships in the past decade, one deity in center field. Joe DiMaggio would turn thirty-seven in 1951, his final season, after which the landscape would be ready for a new hero. But the Yankees had already found their next wunderkind in the zinc mines of Oklahoma. The rookie Mickey Mantle -- his brawn and speed exhaustively chronicled in spring training, his alliterative name tripping off the tongues of wide-eyed reporters, his blond crew cut and blue eyes capturing the hearts of young fans -- was poised to be Gotham's next baseball god.
Who needed the Giants?
"Glad you could make it so soon," Stoneham told Mays as the rookie entered his office. "But they aren't glad where you came from."
Mays, confused, said nothing.
"The Minneapolis fans," Stoneham said. "They're upset." Mays had begun the season with the Minneapolis Millers, a Giants' farm club. In thirty-five games, he had hit .477; one searing drive, in Milwaukee, punctured a hole in the fence. Stoneham told Mays that the Giants were putting an ad in a Minneapolis newspaper to apologize for taking the local team's prodigy. "We're going to tell them," Stoneham said, "that you're the answer to what the Giants have got to have."
Mays remained silent.
"It's unusual, I know," Stoneham said, "but -- is something the matter?"
Mays finally found his voice, high-pitched and earnest: "Mr. Stoneham, I know it's unusual, but what if -- "
"What if what?"
"What if I don't make it?"
Stoneham pointed to a folder on his desk, stuffed with papers. Mays saw his name on the cover.
"You think we just picked your name out of a hat?" Stoneham demanded. "You think we brought you up because somebody saw your name in a headline one day in Louisville or Columbus or Milwaukee or Kansas City? You think nobody's been watching you? You think managers haven't been up nights doing progress reports, that our own scouts haven't checked you out time and again? You think all of this is something somebody dreamed up in the middle of the night two days ago?"
Mays stood there, unsettled by the barrage.
The owner pushed a buzzer beneath his desk and spoke into the intercom: "Ask Frank to come in here." He looked at Mays. "Got luggage?"
"No, sir. It's still back in Minneapolis. They're sending it on."
Stoneham nodded and pushed the buzzer again. "Ask Brannick to save out seventy, eighty dollars," he said, referring to the team's dapper traveling secretary, Eddie Brannick. Then to Mays: "Buy yourself a couple things -- underwear, shirts, socks -- until your stuff gets here."
The door opened, and Frank Forbes, a black fight promoter hired by the Giants to be Mays's chaperone, walked through. "Here he is," Stoneham said. "Take him with you." He extended his hand. "Good luck, Willie."
"Thank you, Mr. Stoneham. I hope I can get into a few games, get a few chances to help. I hope you won't be sorry."
"I won't be sorry." Stoneham turned away, then suddenly turned back. "Get in a few games? Get a few chances to help? Don't you know you're starting tonight?"
Mays's mouth went dry. "Starting? Where?"
Stoneham glared at him, then laughed. "Center field!" he barked. "Where else?" He looked at Forbes. "Get him out of here, Frank."
The Giants were already in Philadelphia, where they would begin a three-game series that night at Shibe Park. Forbes and Mays hustled to Pennsylvania Station, boarded a train, and sat in a Pullman parlor car. Mays had seen the opulent coaches in the movies, the ubiquitous Negro porter fawning over white passengers. But now Mays was the passenger, and the swivel armchairs were layered with meaning. His father, Willie Howard Mays, Sr., had been a Pullman porter, making beds in the sleeping cars chugging out of Birmingham. The train's quiet rhythm lulled the white passengers to sleep, and the elder Mays, wearing a white jacket, would listen to the sound of the whistle at night, signaling which engineer was driving the train. "He'd lay his hand on that rope," he said, "and it was like an autograph."
Now his son sat in a Pullman car, heading south on an eighty-five-mile trip that the young man could not have envisioned even a month earlier, with the clicking of the wheels saying to Willie: You're a Giant. You're a Giant. You're a Giant. You're a Giant....
Willie Mays began his major league career poorly -- he went 1-for-26 -- but he slowly found his way. He blasted home runs over the lights at the Polo Grounds, chased down fly balls in the cavernous outfield, unleashed deadly throws to the plate, and ran the bases with daring glee. But what mesmerized his teammates, what captivated the crowds, was his incandescent personality, bringing, his manager said, "a contagious happiness that gets everybody on the club" and moving Branch Rickey to observe that the rookie's greatest attribute "was the frivolity in his bloodstream [that] doubled his strength with laughter."
Newspapers promptly hailed the "Negro slugger" as "the Amazing Mays" and "the Wondrous Willie," a unique blend of speed and power who performed with childlike exuberance. But the most prescient account appeared on June 24 in the New York Post -- one month after his debut -- which chronicled a stunning baserunning feat as "part of the legend" of this new marvel.
Long before his Rookie of the Year Award, long before his two Most Valuable Player awards and his one batting title and his 12 Gold Gloves, long before his 24 All-Star Games and his 3,283 hits and his 660 home runs, and long before "the Catch," Willie Mays was a legend. And by the time he retired, he was an American icon whose athletic brilliance and stylistic bravado contributed to the assimilation of blacks during the turbulent civil rights era, a distinctive figure of ambition, sacrifice, and triumph who became a lasting cultural touchstone for a nation in search of heroes.
Mays represented the quintessential American dream. He was the poor Depression-era black kid from the segregated South who overcame insuperable odds to reach the pinnacle of society, and he succeeded by hewing to the country's most cherished values -- hard work, clean living, and perseverance. He also benefited from great timing. Had he been born fifteen or even ten years earlier, he would have played most if not all of his career in the Negro Leagues, probably remembered, along with Josh Gibson, Oscar Charleston, and Cool Papa Bell, as a mythic but ill-defined figure who was victimized by America's racial hypocrisy. Had he been born ten years later, he would never have been part of perhaps the most celebrated era in sports history -- New York in the 1950s -- when baseball dominated the sports culture, integrated...
From AudioFile
Product details
- ASIN : B003DYGNM4
- Publisher : Scribner; Reprint edition (March 25, 2010)
- Publication date : March 25, 2010
- Language : English
- File size : 4.2 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 660 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #185,117 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #20 in Baseball Biographies (Kindle Store)
- #34 in Baseball History
- #180 in Baseball Biographies (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

James S. Hirsch is former reporter for The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of four nonfiction books, including the New York Times bestseller, Hurricane: The Miraculous Journey of Rubin Carter. He lives in the Boston area with his wife, Sheryl, and their children, Amanda and Garrett.
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Customers consider this the greatest sports book they've read, praising its engaging writing style and detailed coverage of Willie Mays' life and career. The biography is well-researched and honest, bringing back memories of Mays' career, and one customer notes it includes 35 outstanding pictures.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as wonderful and the greatest sports book they have ever read, with one customer noting it's a must-read for all baseball fans.
"...The author of this magnificent book, James S. Hirsch, should be commended for what is in my opinion a masterful job of research and story-..." Read more
"...1 player. This was my first in-depth read and really enjoyed it. His baseball-playing father, Cal, poured into Willie his baseball skills...." Read more
"...of over 50 years and a baseball historian of some note: This is a great book and one of the best baseball biographies I've ever read...." Read more
"...Hirsch's fine book "Willie Mays: The Life, The Legend fills in the gaps about the best who ever played the game...." Read more
Customers praise this biography of Willie Mays as one of the best baseball biographies, with one customer noting how it goes into detail about his young life, while others appreciate the perspective on Mays as a person.
"..." by James S. Hirsch is one of the best, most in-depth and enjoyable sports biographies I've ever read...." Read more
"...game of the 1973 World Series. This is a must read for those interested in baseball biography and baseball in the 1950s and 1960s." Read more
"...Overall, this is an excellent biography. I'm glad that I read all 556 pages, and I would heartily recommend it to all." Read more
"...and personal history resonate in this wonderful book about the golden era of baseball...." Read more
Customers praise the writing style of the book, describing it as engaging, readable, and detailed, with one customer noting how the prose creates unforgettable pictures.
"...The result, in my mind, is a fascinating and thorough presentation of an American legend whose professional career spanned from the last year of the..." Read more
"...was both honest and balanced, as exemplified by the often brilliantly descriptive way in which he documented Mays' sadly memorable struggles during..." Read more
"...It is well-written, engaging, and entertaining...." Read more
"...The author has done an outstanding job of capturing the essence of the man, Willie Mays, and the magnificant yet tragically flawed era, the 1950's..." Read more
Customers praise Willie Mays as one of the greatest baseball players ever, with one customer noting that he excelled in every aspect of the game.
"Willie Mays was the greatest all-around player I have ever seen...." Read more
"...I came away from the book thinking, "What an unbelievable talented, nice guy."" Read more
"This is a great biography of one the greatest MLB players of all time. It encompasses his entire life up until 2009...." Read more
"...days when baseball was pervasive, and Willie Mays was the greatest baseball player ever!" Read more
Customers appreciate how the book fills in the personal history of Willie Mays and brings back memories of his career.
"...The result, in my mind, is a fascinating and thorough presentation of an American legend whose professional career spanned from the last year of the..." Read more
"...takes the reader through decades, generations and eras without missing a beat, displaying a "fly-on-the-wall" quality that makes the narrative even..." Read more
"...It is well-written, engaging, and entertaining...." Read more
"...The social history and personal history resonate in this wonderful book about the golden era of baseball...." Read more
Customers appreciate the research quality of the book, finding it well-researched and honest, with one customer noting they learned a lot while enjoying the lesson.
"...With compassionate objectivity he expertly painted a picture that was both honest and balanced, as exemplified by the often brilliantly descriptive..." Read more
"...The author, through his intense research, brings back to life those glorious days when baseball was pervasive, and Willie Mays was the greatest..." Read more
"...I never got the chance to see Mays play, the author offers us some good insight in to life and times of being one of the world's best athletes...." Read more
"...He was/is a very private person. The book does a great job exploring this aspect. It was very well written." Read more
Customers appreciate the color scheme of the book, with one mentioning it features 35 outstanding pictures.
"...With compassionate objectivity he expertly painted a picture that was both honest and balanced, as exemplified by the often brilliantly descriptive..." Read more
"...From our coveted perch my baby brother and I had a great look at one of the most spectacular sights ever seen on a major league diamond...." Read more
"...There are about 35 really outstanding pictures [I read this in hardback, so I don't know how good they look on a Kindle or if all are included]...." Read more
"I’m still reading this book. It’s a long and colorful read. I’m enjoying every chapter." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2024Willie Mays was the greatest all-around player I have ever seen. So, when i found this biography by James Hirsch, I was thrilled to be able to find out more about the man himself. After many years of trying Hirsch finally got Mays to authorize the biography and lent his support to the project. The result, in my mind, is a fascinating and thorough presentation of an American legend whose professional career spanned from the last year of the Negro leagues through 1973. Despite having seen Mays play in person and on television, I learned quite a few things about Willie that I had never known. The greatest never drank, smoked tobacco, and was faithful to his sport and to excellence. He wasn't a leader per se as a teammate, but he led by example until Al Dark made him the Captain of the Giants. Willie was a jokester, and fun in the clubhouse, but he didn't socialize much outside of the game. He offered help to teammates when asked but didn't initiate advice. He was as full of life and optimism when he played his game. His joy was evident at age twenty, when he broke in, up until he was traded to the Mets. You will learn of the paternalistic relationship he had with Leo Durocher, and the nurturing that Willie needed to master his trade. He craved and thrived off of the adulation from the fans, but he was distrustful of strangers, and preferred to stay in his hotel room or at home alone rather than seek celebrity off of the field. He remained in some sense a child and he made a lifetime of giving back to children, especially those hospitalized. We learn of his undisciplined approach to financial matters, his marriage to two wives, and his near bankruptcy state at some times in his life because of reckless spending/ and giving away clothes and cash to others. He would be financially dependent to others for guidance for most of his life-perhaps because his only pure love was for baseball and his second wife Mae. There is so much more, but this is a review and not a summary. Hirsch has done a wonderful job allowing us to see what was inside the myth. He closes with this quote which is essential for understanding the greatness of Mays the player. ..."the numbers for all their elegance, capture only part of the game, and they disservice Mays by failing to reflect his strategic, intangible contributions (inducing bad throws, quick first steps in the outfield, positioning, knowledge of hitters, and so on). The "five tool" designation understates his skills by ignoring his intelligence, preparation, and guile> Mays was always better than the box score." I saw his career, and he was one of a kind. The legend is worthy of all of the accolades given to him. One can only imagine what his numbers would have been but for losing two years to the Army, and the unfavorable ball parks that he played in during his career.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 9, 2011"Willie Mays, The Life, The Legend" by James S. Hirsch is one of the best, most in-depth and enjoyable sports biographies I've ever read. (Other successful similar books, though imminently readable, were either not as well-researched and not as substantive, or not as objective.) This book is without question the definitive biography about Willie Mays.
The prodigious amount of little known information Mr. Hirsch was able to unearth and bring to light through meticulous research was not only in many instances surprising but really rather astounding. The veil is finally lifted about Willie's childhood and his unusual extended family situation while growing up in depression era Alabama. The book in fact is filled with priceless anecdotes and details from every period of Willie's life, including his life after baseball.
The author smoothly and seamlessly takes the reader through decades, generations and eras without missing a beat, displaying a "fly-on-the-wall" quality that makes the narrative even more interesting and enjoyable. I found it extraordinary that Mr. Hirsch, who was too young to have seen Mays play, seemed to have really understood the nuances of his research, as exhibited by the ease with which he so credibly and knowingly wrote about baseball and all the events and personalities he mentions in their historical context.
The fact that the author throughout the book did not shy from discussing Willie's eccentricities, perceived and otherwise, or his public and private failures-- in addition to his triumphs--as a person and as a player, makes the book in many ways a valuable resource.
Willie Mays was and is a complex and sensitive man and an extremely prideful person. But he did allow himself, before it was all done, to become the proverbial poster child for the great athlete who doesn't know when to quit. Unlike Joe DiMaggio, who gracefully retired when it was time, Willie was simply unable to fathom a life without baseball and moreover was overwhelmed by his own insecurity and fear of the unknown. The shame of it is that younger fans who saw him long after his once formidable skills had deserted him thought they were seeing Willie Mays when in fact what they were really witnessing was merely an apparition--the ghost of Willie Mays.
While reading "Willie Mays, The Life, The Legend" I rather curiously anticipated seeing just how the author James S. Hirsch would handle Mays' decline and ultimate abasement as a baseball player. In other words I wondered if he would ruin his credibility by not dealing forthrightly and honestly with this somewhat lugubrious part of Mays' long career. I need not have concerned myself. Here again, to my amazement, Mr. Hirsch made it look rather easy (and there's no way it could have been.) With compassionate objectivity he expertly painted a picture that was both honest and balanced, as exemplified by the often brilliantly descriptive way in which he documented Mays' sadly memorable struggles during the 1973 World Series, his final year in baseball.
Most knowledgeable baseball people who saw him play in his prime consider Willie Mays the greatest baseball player who ever lived. But throughout Mays' brilliant career one got the impression that he was a somewhat troubled man. "Willie Mays, The Life, The Legend" reveals a plethora of illuminating information hitherto unknown to the general public about this fiercely private, complex and enigmatic man. It is a cruelly ironic misconception that the talented prodigy in any field of endeavor has the easy road when in fact the exact opposite is often the case because of the burdensome level of overwhelming expectations.
"Willie Mays, The Life, The Legend" is a must-read if you are a fan of baseball or of Willie Mays, although the totality of this thoroughly engrossing life story has a universal appeal that transcends the game of baseball. The author of this magnificent book, James S. Hirsch, should be commended for what is in my opinion a masterful job of research and story-telling!
----Major A. Smith
- Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2024Posnaski in The Baseball 100 lists Willie Mays as the all-time. #1 player. This was my first in-depth read and really enjoyed it. His baseball-playing father, Cal, poured into Willie his baseball skills. Willie just wanted to play the game. Even on off days, you would find him playing stick ball in alleys with kids. His primary love for the game is what made him different from Jackie Robinson in his response to racism. Jackie swallowed his pride many times in order to keep playing baseball; Willie swallowed his pride more times to avoid conflict. Interesting that he learned his over-the-shoulder bucket catch while in the army. Can you imagine the additional baseball stats he would have racked up without the break to be a soldier? I came away from the book thinking, "What an unbelievable talented, nice guy."
Top reviews from other countries
- Michael WallaceReviewed in Canada on May 21, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent buy
Must have if you are a Willie fan.
- Lava1964Reviewed in Canada on October 15, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Terific biography of Mays
This long biography of Willie Mays is well worth reading. It discusses his shy personality that greatly contrasted with his exuberant playing style. I especially liked the stories about how Mays was perceived not to be active as a civil rights personality--yet he fought his own battles many times in a quiet and effective manner.
- ToddReviewed in Canada on December 13, 2021
4.0 out of 5 stars Good story
Good story about an all time legend.
- Julie HammettReviewed in Canada on April 18, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars Loves it
I bought this book for my hubs, I think that he's one of Willie Mays biggest fans
- Marc GlassmanReviewed in Canada on October 6, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
A great book about one of the greatest baseball players of all time.