Submitted by watchungbooksellers on Sun, 09/12/2010 - 5:13pm
10/06/2010 7:00 pm
10/06/2010 8:00 pm
This painstakingly researched book by Douglas J. Gladstone examines
the plight of 874 Major League Baseball players who played between 1947
and 1979, all with brief trials in the majors, careers figuratively
"just long enough to drink a cup of coffee."
Since 1980, Major
League Baseball players have needed one day of service credit for health
benefits and 43 days of service credit to be eligible for a retirement
allowance, but those former ballplayers who played during the 1947-1979
seasons were not included retroactively in the amended vesting
requirement, and so receive no pensions for the time they gave to our
national pastime.
These men, the author suggests, have gulped bitter cups of coffee.
In his careful examination of this issue, which includes many
interviews with former players and some poignant stories of their
plight, Gladstone asks his readers to examine our national relationship
to sports and its heroes, as well as our relationships with those who
precede us in the game of life.
A lifelong baseball fan, DOUGLAS
J. GLADSTONE is a journalist by training, whose published articles have
appeared in the Chicago Sun Times, Baseball Digest and the San Diego
Jewish World, among others. This is his first book.
DAVE MARASH
(Foreword) has been a working journalist for more than 50 years. Best
known for his 16 years as a correspondent for ABC News Nightline, Marash
won Emmy Awards for his coverage of the wars in Nicaragua and Bosnia,
the Oklahoma City bombing, and the explosion that downed TWA Flight 800.
He anchored the opening season of Baseball Tonight on ESPN and did
play-by-play coverage of the New York Knicks and Rangers.