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October 1964 by david halberstam
October 1964 by david halberstam






Jim Bouton, the iconoclastic Yankees’ right-hander, went on to write ‘Ball Four,’ perhaps the most influential baseball book of the modern era Curt Flood, the Cardinals’ center fielder, wrote an autobiography that detailed his heroic and doomed assault on the ‘reserve clause,’ which bound players to one team for life and even Mickey Mantle, who didn’t seem to have even one book in him back when he expressed himself by slamming bats into water coolers, has nearly a dozen volumes with his name on them. Perhaps a book on the players who shared the ’64 season was inevitable considering how many books the players themselves wrote. Some World Series may have featured more great players–though two Cardinals and three Yankees from the ’64 teams eventually made it into the Hall of Fame–but not one has featured a more fascinating collection of vivid personalities, individualists who left lasting imprints on the game and who go right on being an important part of it today.

october 1964 by david halberstam

Louis Cardinals, was considered a good one, but over the years the series and the season have taken on greater stature. At the time, the 1964 baseball season, which culminated in a memorable seven-game series between the New York Yankees and St. “The 1964 baseball season didn’t happen just so David Halberstam could come along and write about it, but it certainly seems that way, especially 30 years later.








October 1964 by david halberstam