Hammering Hank: How the Media Made Henry Aaron

Hammering Hank: How the Media Made Henry Aaron

$35.95 AUD $15.00 AUD

Availability: in stock at our Melbourne warehouse.

Author: Mark Stewart

Format: Hardback

Number of Pages: 252


On April 8, 1999, at Turner Field in Atlanta, Major League Baseball celebrated the 25th anniversary of Henry Aaron's 715th home run, which propelled him past Babe Ruth to the top of the game's all-time home run list. Those expecting to recapture the spark of that long-ago moment may have felt a letdown. The ceremony, while touching and heartfelt, was a made-for-television event that featured stock-footage clips of Aaron and a few neatly crafted tomes recited in Aaron's honor. In retrospect, there may have been no tribute more fitting, for the Aaron with whom we have become comfortable is, after all, a creation of the media. On that evening in 1999 baseball again got a fleeting look at the home run king, acknowledging the cheers, his eyes moist. Fans added this image to everything they know of him and what little they know of him. His is a portrait 50 years in the making which, in truth, is no more than a highly detailed caricature, exquisitely embellished yet somehow still lacking in substance. More than a "sports bio" of a baseball icon, Hammering Hank" is a fascinating account of how the media shaped Henry Aaron, baseball's most prolific home-run hitter. It is, first and foremost, the story of a baseball life. But it also is a look at a life affected more than most by events outside of baseball. Long before Aaron became part of the national landscape, he was a reflection of it. And try as he might to shut out the world around him, the forces of that world--with all their complexities and indignities and randomness--were always very much a part of him.



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Description
Author: Mark Stewart

Format: Hardback

Number of Pages: 252


On April 8, 1999, at Turner Field in Atlanta, Major League Baseball celebrated the 25th anniversary of Henry Aaron's 715th home run, which propelled him past Babe Ruth to the top of the game's all-time home run list. Those expecting to recapture the spark of that long-ago moment may have felt a letdown. The ceremony, while touching and heartfelt, was a made-for-television event that featured stock-footage clips of Aaron and a few neatly crafted tomes recited in Aaron's honor. In retrospect, there may have been no tribute more fitting, for the Aaron with whom we have become comfortable is, after all, a creation of the media. On that evening in 1999 baseball again got a fleeting look at the home run king, acknowledging the cheers, his eyes moist. Fans added this image to everything they know of him and what little they know of him. His is a portrait 50 years in the making which, in truth, is no more than a highly detailed caricature, exquisitely embellished yet somehow still lacking in substance. More than a "sports bio" of a baseball icon, Hammering Hank" is a fascinating account of how the media shaped Henry Aaron, baseball's most prolific home-run hitter. It is, first and foremost, the story of a baseball life. But it also is a look at a life affected more than most by events outside of baseball. Long before Aaron became part of the national landscape, he was a reflection of it. And try as he might to shut out the world around him, the forces of that world--with all their complexities and indignities and randomness--were always very much a part of him.