James T. Farrell and Baseball

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James T. Farrell and Baseball

Dreams and Realism on Chicago's South Side

Charles DeMotte

330 pages
17 photographs, 5 illustrations, index

Hardcover

December 2019

978-0-8032-9643-5

$45.00 Add to Cart
eBook (PDF)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

December 2019

978-1-4962-1872-8

$45.00 Add to Cart
eBook (EPUB)
Ebook purchases delivered via Leaf e-Reader

December 2019

978-1-4962-1870-4

$45.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

James T. Farrell and Baseball is a social history of baseball on Chicago’s South Side, drawing on the writings of novelist James T. Farrell along with historical sources. Charles DeMotte shows how baseball in the early decades of the twentieth century developed on all levels and in all areas of Chicago, America’s second largest city at the time, and how that growth intertwined with Farrell’s development as a fan and a writer who used baseball as one of the major themes of his work.

DeMotte goes beyond Farrell’s literary focus to tell a larger story about baseball on Chicago’s South Side during this time—when Charles Comiskey’s White Sox won two World Series and were part of a rich baseball culture that was widely played at the amateur, semipro, and black ball levels. DeMotte highlights the 1919–20 Black Sox fix and scandal, which traumatized not only Farrell and Chicago but also baseball and the broader culture. By tying Farrell’s fictional and nonfictional works to Chicago’s vibrant baseball history, this book fills an important gap in the history of baseball during the Deadball Era.
              

Author Bio

Charles DeMotte is an adjunct professor of sociology at the State University of New York College at Cortland. He is the author of Bat, Ball, and Bible: Baseball and Sunday Observance in New York (Potomac Books, 2012).

 

Praise

"In James T. Farrell and Baseball: Dreams and Realism on Chicago’s South Side, sociologist Charles DeMotte paints a rich, eloquent, and colorful portrait of the author’s life, the world he grew up in, and how they pertain to his writings on America’s Pastime. DeMotte has done his work well. Besides combing Farrell’s work, the author’s extensive sources range widely from the Dorothy and Harold Seymour papers, to the James T. Farrell papers at the University of Pennsylvania, to the Chicago History Museum and the Newberry Library."—Bob Komoroski, Inside Game

 “Charles DeMotte captures the colorful and vibrant world of James T. Farrell’s boyhood neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago—a teeming environment populated by youth of every race and ethnicity who dreamed the American dream and intermingled on the city’s baseball fields. DeMotte shows how Farrell’s affection for the game and his observation of the various subcultures in this milieu contributed to his life’s work. The book is an engaging and thoroughly enlightening biography and work of social history.”—Thomas Wolf, coauthor of Midnight Assassin: A Murder in America’s Heartland

 

“Admirers of James T. Farrell who love baseball as he did will welcome this Farrell-tinted study of the evolution of organized baseball on Chicago’s South Side in the early twentieth century, the place and time that the novelist made his own in Studs Lonigan and other works. Baseball fans new to Farrell will appreciate his kindred spirit and Mr. DeMotte’s account of the sport’s growth in the era of Ty Cobb and the Black Sox scandal, a time when young Farrell, too, was growing up.”—Robert K. Landers, author of An Honest Writer: The Life and Times of James T. Farrell

Table of Contents

Preface    
Acknowledgments    
Introduction    
1. Growing Up on the South Side    
2. Farrell, Baseball, and the Making of a Literary Mind    
3. Danny O’Neill’s Baseball Dreams    
4. Chicago’s Summer Pastime    
5. The College Game, Baseball Diplomacy, and the Summer Controversy    
6. Rube Foster and Chicago’s Black South Side Teams     
7. Comiskey and Chicago’s White South Side Team    
8. The Business of Baseball     
9. The Fix, the Scandal, and the Response    
10. Looking Backward    
Epilogue    
Notes    
Bibliography    
Index

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