A biographer’s job is two-fold: to know his subject better than
anyone on the planet, and to convey that intimate knowledge elegantly and
thoroughly to those who know him less well. In the case of a baseball
player, a biographer must not merely know the player, but the man, his
world, his sport, his youth, his passion, and his old age. His days
between the white lines, his headlines, and his struggles are not
enough—we want the whole of the man and all of the circumstances that
make him mortal while he strives for the immortality of competitive
greatness.
Rick Huhn’s The
Sizzler: George Sisler, Baseball’s Forgotten Great does all this
with remarkable economy. Ignore the stale debates about whether Sisler
was as great as Cobb
claimed he was, or if he was as overrated as Bill James says—this
biography gives you Sisler whole and complete. Sisler, born 113 years ago,
dead for 32 years, and remembered only when Ichiro broke his lone record,
is alive in this outstanding biography. He may have been stable,
conservative, and self effacing—character traits that lend themselves to
long term investing but rarely to memorable lives—but, thanks to Huhn,
he is also fascinating. I am not sure how Rick Huhn’s The
Sizzler: George Sisler, Baseball’s Forgotten Great slipped through
the cracks. While a better biography than Timothy Gay’s Tris
Speaker and Leigh
Montville’s Ted Williams, those two books received award
nominations and acclaim,
while Huhn’s book seems to have gathered little attention. This is
puzzling, given that it is one of the best baseball biographies that I
have ever read.
Sizzler
George Sisler's
achievements were remembered by the US
Postal Service, which honored him with a
stamp in 2000 as part of its Legends of
Baseball series.
It is not easy to write about baseball players before they reach the
Major Leagues because so much of that material can be mundane and
uninteresting, often sounding like a player was destined for greatness or
wholly unlikely to be recognized. But Huhn tells the story of Sisler’s
high school and college years (Sisler was a graduate of Michigan in
Engineering) with great fluidity, emphasizing his tremendous athletic
prowess and determination to be a college graduate. He doesn’t rely
strictly on statistics or game accounts, which makes the description human
and compelling. His account of Sisler’s early relationship with Branch
Rickey is truly well written, as is the story of Sisler’s illegal
contract with the Pirates at age
seventeen, and a number of other stories that come together by the end of
the book.
It is equally difficult to write about a player’s career without
lapsing into long descriptions that amount to box scores in prose. Huhn
avoids this trap as well and narrates Sisler’s career as a part of his
life. In particular, Sisler’s shyness is highlighted by contrast with
his enormous fame during and after his spectacular 1922
season, and again brought into focus with his career threatening eye
problem that caused him to miss the 1923
season. You never sense that Huhn relies solely on baseball news to
describe Sisler—his writing always focuses on Sisler the man and treats
his baseball achievements as one important aspect of his life.
Finally, baseball biographies can flag when they reach the chapters on
a player’s retirement years. Huhn’s biography, however, maintains
interest to the end by relating Sisler’s continued involvement in the
sport against the background of the many connections that he made as a
young man. I thoroughly enjoyed the stories of Sisler’s coaching days,
his relationship with Branch
Rickey, and the brief stories of Sisler’s sons in baseball.
Rick Huhn’s The
Sizzler: George Sisler, Baseball’s Forgotten Great is a terrific
baseball biography about a man who could not have been easy to write about
because he lacked Cobb’s
rarified intensity and Ruth’s
sublime boisterousness. It is unconditionally worthy of attention from
both casual baseball fans and serious historians.
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