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Books by
Roger Kahn


INTO MY OWN: The Remarkable People and Events That Shaped a Life

THE HEAD GAME: Baseball Seen from the Pitcher's Mound

Read Ron Kaplan's interview with Pulitzer Prize winner, Thomas Oliphant
October 21, 2005


Baseball Roundups
by Ron Kaplan:


2005 FALL

RED SOX BOOKS, PART DEUX

THE YANKEES AND RED SOX: A Rivalry for the Ages

REMEMBERING WHAT THE NATIONAL PASTIME IS ALL ABOUT

2004 FALL

2004 SPRING

THE WORLD SERIES CENTENNIAL

CELEBRATING THE YANKEES CENTENNIAL

2003 SPRING

2001 FALL

2002 SPRING

More Baseball Books Reviewed by Ron Kaplan:

FEEDING THE MONSTER
by Seth Mnookin

THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN by Fay Vincent

THE BIG BAM
by Leigh Montville

GAME OF SHADOWS
by Mark Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams

DOUBLE PLAY
by Robert B. Parker

FANTASYLAND
by Sam Walker

THE FINAL SEASON
by Tom Stanton

THE HEAD GAME
by Roger Kahn

HOME RUN edited by George Plimpton

INTO MY OWN
by Roger Kahn

JOE DIMAGGIO
by Richard Ben Cramer

A PITCHER'S STORY
by Roger Angell

ROB NEYER'S BIG BOOK OF BASEBALL LINEUPS
by Rob Neyer

INTO MY OWN: The Remarkable People and Events That Shaped a Life
Roger Kahn
St. Martin's Griffin
Memoir
ISBN-10: 0312371284
ISBN-13: 9780312371289


Roger Kahn has been writing about sports and other topics for more than half a century, but it was only with THE BOYS OF SUMMER, his watershed account of the Brooklyn Dodgers, that he became a household name and a standardbearer for similar endeavors.

The product of an intellectual New York home, Kahn grew into a curious, if not exactly academically motivated, young man. School was tolerated, not embraced, until his father arranged an interview for him with the Herald Tribune. Thus began a long career in journalism, writing about other people and issues. With INTO MY OWN, he invites the reader into a personal world, focusing on several individuals who were influential in his life and work.

Among these are Stanley Woodward, his boss, mentor and friend, who challenged him to be not just another sportswriting hack. Kahn looks back fondly on his salad days as a young copyboy who broke into the ranks of the ink-stained wretches, earning more increasingly important assignments until he became the Dodgers' beat reporter.

Since the Brooklyn team was his ticket to middle-aged fame, it is fitting that two of the key members of the team receive significant attention: Harold "Pee Wee" Reese and Jackie Robinson.

Reese, the shortstop and captain, was a Southerner who literally embraced the African-American Robinson in full view of hate-spewing racists, thereby setting an example of gentility, cooperation, tolerance and friendship. Robinson was a more fiery personality and gave Kahn the opportunity to learn about the difficulties of being a black man in America on several levels. These relationships lasted long after the players had retired.

Kahn was more than a one-trick pony, however; he also wrote about "serious" subjects, such as politics and his Jewish heritage (THE PASSIONATE PEOPLE). He also recalls relationships with the likes of Eugene McCarthy and the poet Robert Frost.

The most touching chapter, however, is painfully personal: the difficult life and premature death of his son, Roger Laurence, a suicide at 23. Roger L. was the product of a "broken home" following the divorce between Kahn and his second wife, Alice. The author does not mince words as he writes about their tenuous relationship, which deteriorated when his son was quite young. Despite numerous therapists and private schools (including a controversial boarding school), Roger L. sank deeper into bipolar problems, much to his father's helpless distress.

   --- Reviewed by Ron Kaplan

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