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Satchel Paige: Striking Out Jim Crow
Satchel Paige: Striking Out Jim Crow | James Sturm
2 posts | 3 read | 3 to read
Baseball Hall of Famer Leroy "Satchel" Paige (1905? – 1982) changed the face of the game in a career that spanned five decades. Much has been written about this larger-than-life pitcher, but when it comes to Paige, fact does not easily separate from fiction. He made a point of writing his own history…and then re-writing it. A tall, lanky fireballer, he was arguably the Negro League’s hardest thrower, most entertaining storyteller and greatest gate attraction. Now the Center for Cartoon Studies turns a graphic novelist’s eye to Paige’s story. Told from the point of view of a sharecropper, this compelling narrative follows Paige from game to game as he travels throughout the segregated South. In stark prose and powerful graphics, author and artist share the story of a sports hero, role model, consummate showman, and era-defining American.
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review
WanderingBookaneer
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Pickpick

This slim volume will teach readers about an important era in baseball history.

review
LitSidekick
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Mehso-so

I read this for the @bookriot #readharder challenge because it's about sports and double plus bonus it's an all-ages comic. I was not overly enthralled by the book because it shows two games from Paige's long career (one from the Negro League in 1929 and an exhibition game in 1944). They also touch on life in the Jim Crow South in rather heartbreaking ways, but everything felt a little glazed over, I would have loved a longer book.

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