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Faithful to Fenway

Believing in Boston, Baseball, and America's Most Beloved Ballpark

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An unforgettable pilgrimage through America's oldest major league ballpark
The Green Monster. Pesky's Pole. The Lone Red Seat. Yawkey Way. To baseball fans this list of bizarre phrases evokes only one place: Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox. Built in 1912, Fenway Park is Americas oldest major league ballpark still in use. In Faithful to Fenway, Michael Ian Borer takes us out to Fenway where we sit in cramped wooden seats (often with obstructed views of the playing field), where there is a hand-operated scoreboard and an average attendance of 20,000 fewer fans than most stadiums, and where every game has been sold out since May of 2003. There is no Hard Rock Café (like Toronto's Skydome), no swimming pool (like Arizona's Chase Field), and definitely no sushi (which has become a fan favorite from Baltimore to Seattle). As Borer tells us in this captivating book, Fenway is short on comfort but long on character.
Faithful to Fenway investigates the mystique of the ballpark. Borer, who lived in Boston before and after the Red Sox historic 2004 World Series win, draws on interviews with Red Sox players, including Jason Varitek and Carl Yastrzemski, management, including Larry Lucchino and John Henry, groundskeepers, vendors, and scores of fans to uncover what the park means for Boston and the people who revere it. Borer argues that Fenway is nothing less than a national icon, more than worthy of the banner outside the stadium that proclaims, "America's Most Beloved Ballpark". Certainly as one of New England's greatest landmarks, Fenway captures the hearts and imaginations of a deferential and devoted public. There are T-shirts, bumper stickers, banners, and snow globes that honor the ballpark. Fenway shows up in popular films, novels, television commercials, and in replicated form in people's backyards—and coming in 2008 to Quincy, Massachusetts, is Mini-Fenway Park, a replica stadium built especially for kids.
Full of legendary stories, amusing anecdotes, and the shared triumph and tragedy of the Red Sox and their fans, Faithful to Fenway offers a fresh and insightful perspective, offering readers an unforgettable pilgrimage to the mecca of baseball.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 31, 2008
      In this, his first book, Borer, an assistant professor of sociology and urban studies at Furman University, explores the sociological and urban cultural impact the Red Sox's fabled Fenway Park has had on Boston. After explaining that an "important place can become a part of culture's symbolic system and help foster collective memories," Borer demonstrates how Fenway, by providing "a place where the narrative could be passed from one generation to the next," became the specific site where the locals' individual histories developed into the region's collective history. Along with his astute social scientific insight, Borer also includes plenty of first-person accounts of the ballpark from Red Sox greats like Carl Yastrzemski and Johnny Pesky and from regular Bostonians and out-of-town baseball fans. This ability to intermingle scholarly research with America's beloved pastime has allowed Borer to write an astute academic treatise that has the appeal of a consumer sports pub.

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2008
      Borer (sociology & urban studies, Furman Univ.), a Boston resident before his move to the South, assesses the attraction of Fenway Park through his own expert lens. The results may not appeal to casual fans/readers, but they will prove invaluable not only to Red Sox and more general baseball scholars but also to students of urban life, the organization of limited inner-city space, social psychology and collective memory, how a baseball park can become a cultural shrine, and a cohort's shared valuesnot to mention Fenway's contributions to our understanding of "fandom." Well researched and sourced, this is best for academic libraries.Gilles Renaud, Ontario Court of Justice, Cornwall

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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