
Ballplayer
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

January 23, 2017
Jones, one of the best switch hitters in Major League Baseball history, who spent his entire 23-year career with the Atlanta Braves, offers an insider’s look into professional baseball. In this sold memoir, cowritten with Walton, a sportswriter who covered the Braves for nearly 20 years, Jones, with the same tenacity and candor in which he played the game, takes readers into the backyard of his boyhood home in Pierson, Fla., where he and his father (a varsity high school baseball coach) simulated games they watched on TV. He recounts what it was like to have three dozen Major League scouts attend his practices and games while at the Bolles School, a private boarding institution in Jacksonville, Fla., and recalls the day he became the top overall pick in baseball’s 1990 draft. The Braves won the 1995 World Series and made the postseason every year for the next decade. But the era was plagued by rampant steroids use, and Jones—who, though tempted, claims he never touched the stuff—writes openly yet carefully about Barry Bonds, Roger Clemons, and other tainted players. He also chronicles how his first two marriages crumbled (and accepts his share of the blame), and takes readers into the batter’s box for some of his most memorable at-bats.

February 1, 2017
An Atlanta Braves legend tells his story.When Jones retired from Major League Baseball at the end of the 2012 season, he did so as a franchise hero. One of the greatest switch hitters in the long history of the game, Jones, the 1999 National League MVP, eight-time All-Star, World Series champion, and one of the linchpins of the franchise's glory years, played for his entire career, including 19 years in the major league, in the Atlanta Braves organization. In the parlance of some traditionalists, Jones played the game "the right way." His autobiography, ably co-authored by Walton, who covered the Braves for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, tells about the life and career of a small-town Florida guy who wanted to play professional baseball from the age of 4. His main inspiration was his father, a former college baseball player and high school coach who became the primary influence on his career. Jones left his small town to play for a larger high school where his exploits earned him selection as the first overall pick in the 1990 MLB draft and a hefty signing bonus. Jones is no saint--he unflinchingly details his two failed marriages, one of which fell apart because of his serial infidelities that produced a child--but he doesn't offer much in the way of true insight, maintaining the focus on his love of the sport, his approach to the game, and his successes and failures on the field. Jones was undoubtedly a great player but not a transcendent figure. There will be little readership for the book outside of baseball fans, especially in the Atlanta area, but those fans will find a clear, readable old-school account of a player who almost certainly will be voted into the Hall of Fame, possibly as early as 2018, his first year of eligibility.
COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

November 15, 2016
Third baseman and legendary switch-hitter Jones, who racked up some amazing statistics during his 19 years with the Atlanta Braves, chronicles his career, comments on his teammates, analyzes top moments pitch by pitch, and reflects on money- and steroid-soaked baseball today. With a ten-city tour.
Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

April 1, 2017
Chipper Jones spent his entire nearly 19-year, likely Hall of Fame career with the Atlanta Braves. During that time, the Braves won 12 division titles, played in the World Series three times, and won the Series once. Jones, an eight-time All Star and the 1999 National League MVP, had a small-town upbringing in Florida, dreaming of playing in the Major Leagues. He traces his career chronologically, starting in 1993, and baseball fans will revel in the anecdotes and behind-the-scenes look at the game. He writes engagingly of his relationships with teammates, manager Bobby Cox, and even some rivals, such as Derek Jeter, with whom Jones became fast friends. He also delves into his extramarital affairs and their effect on his personal and professional lives. (One of those affairs produced a son whom Jones didn't see until the boy was nearly one year old.) This is a very honest sports memoir that offers a perceptive look at the dark side of fame.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)
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