"Blindsidingly fantastic. . . . Could be the most entertaining and don’t-put-down baseball book for the '24 season."—Tom Hoffarth, fartheroffthewall.com
"Tim Manners wound up writing an autobiography of Yankees great and Reds announcer Waite Hoyt. The miracle is, Hoyt passed 40 years ago, in 1984. The book? It sat unfinished in a box of Hoyt's things. Fate waited for someone to discover its existence . . . . Magic.”—Pete A. Turner, The Break it Down Show
"A fascinating read. . . . Wonderful job. . . . Highly recommended!"—Chris Russo, Mad Dog Radio, Sirius XM
“Guided by the deft hand of Tim Manners, Waite Hoyt shares rollicking stories and sharp insights from a Hall of Fame career fashioned at the dawning of a dynasty unrivaled in sports: the New York Yankees. Manners takes us back to the days of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig—and well beyond—through the eyes of an early mound master whose story can finally be told.”—Tyler Kepner, baseball columnist for the New York Times and best-selling author of K: A History of Baseball in Ten Pitches
“From the trove of writings left behind by Hall of Fame pitcher Waite Hoyt, Tim Manners has woven together a warm, intensely candid, and very human story of the highest realms of success as well as the coldest moments of the ultimate realities. Very few baseball biographies have the range of triumph and anguish, of poignance and redemption, as this self-told tale of the ace of the legendary 1927 Yankees.”—Donald Honig, author of Baseball When the Grass Was Real
“What a great find to tell the story in Hoyt’s own words.”—David Maraniss, author of Path Lit by Lightning: The Life of Jim Thorpe
“Nearly forty years after his passing, baseball’s greatest storyteller finally tells his own story in his own words. From baseball to vaudeville to broadcasting, and just about anything and everything in between, Waite Hoyt led baseball’s most unique and eclectic life. Tim Manners painstakingly pieces together moments and memories to reveal fascinating insight into not just Hoyt but also the times he lived in. Hoyt’s story needed to be told, and like his legendary rain delay stories, Schoolboy makes it worth the wait. . . . What a wonderful read!”—Lance McAlister, host of 700WLW Sports, Cincinnati
“The Yankees famed ‘Murderers’ Row’ era wasn’t just about the power of Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig. There were Hall of Fame–bound pitchers on that great team as well, none more prominent than the colorful local star Waite Hoyt, whose life story continues to fascinate students of the game’s history.”—Marty Appel, Yankees historian and author of Pinstripe Empire
“Manners’s skillfully edited and seamless narrative, compiled from Hall of Famer Waite Hoyt’s lifetime of memories, is a real baseball treasure. Success, failure, doubts, and achievements, in baseball and Hoyt’s personal life, are all here in his own words. This book will enhance Hoyt’s status as a baseball star, as well as a man.”—Alan D. Gaff, author of Lou Gehrig: The Lost Memoir