By Justin Mai
Of the Frontpage
Milwaukee staff
July 20, 2009
Pride of October: What It Was To Be Young and a Yankee. Bill
Madden. New York. Warner Books, Inc. 2003. 453 pages. $26.99.
In his 2003 book the longtime New York Daily News sports columnist, Bill Madden, describes the
highs and lows of playing for arguably the most successful sports franchise in
history, The New York Yankees. Madden goes into great detail through interviews
with current and former players about the life of a Yankee in New York City.
Everything from fights between famous teammates in the team hotel to the joys
of winning so many World Championships, Madden seems to hit every point about
what it was like to be Young and a Yankee.
Bill Madden, who covered the Yankees for nine years, sat
down with 18 current or former Yankee greats in his book Pride of October: What It Was To Be Young and a Yankee. Madden
molds this history of the Yankees in part story-telling and part drama. Madden
knew went to great lengths to bring together the stories of so many Yankee
greats.
Madden always just simply asked the question to each of his
subjects on what it was like to be a Yankee. He portrayed each subject and that
simply question with always a high level of grace and wit. Madden stated goal
of the book was just to capture as much of the team’s past as possible.
It always seemed to be amazing how Madden seemed to make
each story from all of his subjects flow together very smoothly and easily. No
person seemed to be out of place in terms of placement in the book and no story
from each person was out of order. The whole book, even though it was a
combination of multiple interviews with his 18 subjects, seemed to be that of a
major league’s team batting order: each story built off of each other and each
new subject almost added to the previous subject’s story.
As mentioned before, Madden’s goal of the book was to
provide a complete history of the Yankees from the view of the players. Madden,
who has also written other books about the Yankees, interviewed players from
the far past including Phil Rizzuto and Yogi Berra to players of the recent
generation including Don Mattingly and Paul O’Neill. In all Madden chronicles
the story of 18 Yankee greats and even interviewed the wife of the deceased
great Yankee catcher, Elston Howard.
Madden masterfully wrote about each player with a sort of
affection and class. He always knew each player’s place in Yankee history and
always made sure to communicate that to the reader. Madden also skillfully
characterized all of the emotions that went into to be a Major League Baseball
player as well. He made sure to make the reader feel the highest of highs
through the eyes of Yogi Berra when winning his ten world championships to the
lowest of lows when Berra was fired years later by the unpredictable owner
George Steinbrenner.
Madden, as I stated before, covered the Yankees for nine
years for The New York Daily News in
the 1980s. He also co-wrote the book Zim
– A Baseball Life with the famous player and years later manager Don
Zimmer. Madden also wrote about fiery and crazy New York Yankees owner George
Steinbrenner in his 1991 book entitled Damned Yankees: A No-Holds-Barred
Account of Life With "Boss" Steinbrenner. Madden is also a member the distinguished Baseball Writers Association
of America which includes voting for players to be potentially admitted to the
Baseball Hall of Fame.
These credentials show that Madden is not a fluke when it
comes to baseball writing. Madden knew how to portray the Yankees to outsiders
of the New York area as he grew up in New Jersey and just a short car ride away
from Yankee Stadium.
Madden used a style that was easy to understand of the
storied history of the Yankees to even novice baseball fans. Madden used a conservationist tone to his writing
which worked well considering that most of the book was drawn up from
interviews that he conducted with each of his subjects. Madden went even to
describe most interview locations and all the issues that he had to deal with
as he tried to set up these informal chats with all of his subjects.
It is easy to notice throughout the book that Madden is an
avid Yankee fans. Although it seemed to add to the overall affection of each
player and prestige of the book, at times I believed that it may have clouded
the writing for Madden. He always portrayed each Yankees player with a high
level of respect and admiration but when describing when certain players left
the Yankees to go play for another team. It never seemed to matter what they
did in other uniforms, as if their importance in the overall Yankee history
diminished because they left New York.
None the less, the goal of the book was to provide a history
of some current and former Yankees. Madden showed his excellence and expertise
of covering the Yankees for so many years and showed the reader the importance
of the New York Yankees to the baseball world. Madden knows that the Yankees
are the most widely known team in baseball history and this book shows us why
they are that way.
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the book. As a huge Yankees
fan and an even bigger fan of the game of baseball, I caught myself throughout
the book feeling as if I were right alongside of these players during the
stories of the great run of World Championships in the 1950s or when the team
lost the World Series to the Arizona Diamondbacks in 2001. I felt as if I were
actually right there watching inside the team clubhouse and feeling the way
they felt.
Madden elegantly displayed the emotion of each player in
every story throughout this book and always knew the importance of each player
to the Yankee History. This book would be recommended to all baseball fans
across the country and across the globe. Even the biggest Yankee hater would
enjoy the thoughtful and emotional appeal to the book. These people may even
admit to feeling the joys of the successes of the Yankees throughout even
though they may be the most serious of Yankee haters.
Pride of October: What
It Was To Be Young and a Yankee shows us all what it is indeed to that of
the title: Young and a Yankee. Bill Madden interviewed 18 current and former
Yankee players to bring a story of high emotion and prestige. Madden knew what
he wanted to do throughout the book and never failed once to bring out the
great history of the Yankees.