![]() Gradually we see her neighborhood unraveling under economic pressures, the Dodgers and Giants moving to the West Coast, and finally, her mother dying of an apparent heart attack at 51. Goodwin also offers a child's-eye view of the Cold War, from the lunacy of bomb shelters and ``duck and cover'' drills to a particularly disturbing memory of reenacting the McCarthy hearings with other neighborhood children. If baseball bonded her more deeply to her father, books served the same purpose in her relationship with her mother, a sickly woman with severe angina and numerous other problems. in narrative art.'' One can easily see how re-creating these games from the score book taught her to harness her imagination to quotidian details to re-create history. ![]() ![]() When she was six, she recalls, her father gave her a score book and taught her how to use it, a gift that ``opened heart to baseball.'' Retelling games for her father's benefit after he came home from work was her ``first lesson. Perhaps the biggest difference between Goodwin and other girls growing up in this era was her deep and abiding enthusiasm for baseball. Her father worked, her mother was a homemaker. She grew up on suburban Long Island at a time when many families were relocating to such communities. ![]() In many ways Goodwin had a typical '50s girlhood. ![]() Pulitzer Prizewinning historian Goodwin (No Ordinary Time, 1994, etc.) turns her gaze inward, looking back on a childhood enlivened by books and baseball. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |