Synopses & Reviews
The fifteen major-league managers interviewed in The Man in the Dugout represent six decades of baseball—men like Joe McCarthy of the New York Yankees and Walter Alston of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Each oral history, steeped in nostalgia and confidentiality, is a record of the triumphs and defeats of the man carrying the prime responsibility of a multimillion-dollar franchise. Here the manager is revealed as a strategist, tactician, peacemaker, politician, ego-soother, and builder of self-confidence. He holds the toughest, most gratifying, and most insecure job in baseball.
Review
“We are given a new dimension—we are made to discover not only what happens on the ballfield, but how it happens.”—Newsday Newsday
Review
"Honig has proven himself to be one of baseballs best and most important chroniclers. . . . This is baseball history at its best. Fans will treasure it.”—Library Journal Library Journal
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“Honig shows his knack for getting the most out of former players and managers with an ability to report his interviews entertainingly, informatively, and amusingly.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Review
“With every . . . baseball book, Don Honig heaps delight on top of pleasure. . . . [He] has worked the vein with skill and taste and enthusiasm enough to enrich all of us fans.”—Red Smith Red Smith
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“A winning lineup of assorted baseball managers with good memories for good stories about people and baseball.”—Philadelphia Bulletin Philadelphia Bulletin
About the Author
Donald Honig, a professional ballplayer turned writer, is also the author of Baseball When the Grass Was Real and Baseball between the Lines, both reprinted as Bison Books.