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The Fenway Effect: A Cultural History of the Boston Red Sox

The Fenway Effect: A Cultural History of the Boston Red Sox

Current price: $34.95
Publication Date: April 1st, 2024
Publisher:
University of Nebraska Press
ISBN:
9781496232335
Pages:
280
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

To be a part of Red Sox Nation is to be a hopeful romantic who neither betrays loyalty nor surrenders hope in the direst of circumstances. From Bangor to Back Bay, New Englanders endure in baseball matters. And life. The team’s history has intersected with the history of Boston and well beyond it, through the Curse of the Bambino, the military service of Ted Williams during World War II, and the Boston Marathon bombing. The Fenway Effect chronicles these stories and others that have built the incredible saga of the Boston Red Sox.

How did Cheers depict the passion of Boston’s sports fans? Why is Narragansett beer so important to New England? What’s the architectural impact of The Teammates—the statue of Bobby Doerr, Johnny Pesky, Ted Williams, and Dom DiMaggio outside Fenway Park? What did the Boston press really think about Red Sox owner Harry Frazee selling Babe Ruth to the Yankees? What was the origin of Fenway Park’s predecessor—Huntington Avenue Grounds?

Even Yankees fans will tip their caps to the rich impact of the Red Sox on music, movies, branding, broadcasting, and more. Plus, there’s a chapter focusing on the oral history of Red Sox fans, some of whom share here anecdotes that are funny, insightful, and heartwarming. 

About the Author

David Krell is an author, speaker, and former producer at MSNBC. He is the author of 1962: Baseball and America in the Time of JFK (Nebraska, 2021) and “Our Bums”: The Brooklyn Dodgers in History, Memory, and Popular Culture.
 

Praise for The Fenway Effect: A Cultural History of the Boston Red Sox

"This book is one that any baseball fan who understands what the Red Sox mean to the New England region will want to read."—Guy Who Reviews Sports Books

"Krell's effort provides a different look at a city and franchise that both enjoy being out front. They are no longer like Eeyore."—Bob D’Angelo, Sports Bookie

"[The Fenway Effect] will appeal to fans of the New England Nine, whether they are "old school," pre-2004 pessimists or post-2004 bandwagoners. The former will appreciate the nostalgia and the latter discover the illustrious past."—J. Kemper Campbell, Lincoln Journal Star

“I couldn’t possibly love this book more. David Krell has written the definitive tome on Red Sox pop culture and reminds us how the team has been an integral part of Americana for generations. From the Babe to Sam Malone, and that tragic day in 2013 that brought Boston together as never before, this book drips with nostalgia and defines what it means to be a Red Sox fan. This treasure is a gift to Red Sox Nation and is required reading for followers of the Olde Towne Team!”—Erik Sherman, author of Two Sides of Glory: The 1986 Boston Red Sox in Their Own Words

“‘The Sox can steal your soul.’ That line, quoting a Boston fan, sums up the essence of David Krell’s thoroughly researched and engaging analysis of the bonds established between the Red Sox and their devoted fans, a tradition that has been handed down from generation to generation. Krell goes beyond the history of the Sox on the field to demonstrate the many ways in which, from its very beginning, the team has had a significant cultural impact, not only in Boston but throughout New England.”—Larry Baldassaro, author of Tony Lazzeri: Yankees Legend and Baseball Pioneer

“David Krell’s cultural history gives Red Sox fans (and foes) a joyous exploration of the franchise’s hold on American life. From the very real (Williams, Yastrzemski, Gowdy, Narragansett beer, the Citgo sign) to the unreal (Cheers’s Sam ‘Mayday’ Malone, Jimmy Fallon in Fever Pitch, Bill Buckner’s redemption in Curb Your Enthusiasm) to the surreal (Jimmy Piersall’s incredible life, the unbelievable 1975 Game Six, and the unbearable 1986 Game Six), the reader will relish this imaginative history of the former Boston Americans from the Huntington Avenue Grounds.”—Judith R. Hiltner and James R. Walker, authors of Red Barber: The Life and Legacy of a Broadcasting Legend