Vintage Books
Sports
Collectors Digest
April 2001 |
Glory
of Their Times
By Marty Appel
Two score and two hernias ago, Lawrence Ritter, a professor of economics
and finance at NYU, set forth on a 75,000 mile journey that would lead
to the publication of what is arguably the finest baseball book ever
written.
Arguably? Actually,
it doesn’t
get much argument at all.
“The Glory of Their Times” was
published in September 1966, after four years of preparation. A couple
of years ago, Sports Collectors
Digest readers named it the best baseball book of all time, a salute
that draws little dispute in any such discussion.
Like the Beatles
ill-fated trip to Decca Records, the manuscript for “Glory” was
shown the door at Prentice-Hall, Houghton Mifflin and Holt Rinehart and
Winston, before MacMillan decided to advance Ritter $3,000 to publish
the work. The heroes in this tale include a textbook salesman for MacMillan
named Stanley Holwitz, who was visiting Ritter at his NYU office, and
the editor, Bob Markel, who accepted it.
“I had several influences,” says Ritter, 79, a resident
of Manhattan’s Upper West Side, dapper as ever in a Babe Ruth tee-shirt
on a winter’s day. “First there was the death of Ty Cobb
in 1961. I felt that someone needed to record the remembrances of a sport
that had played such a significant role in American life. The players
from the game’s earliest days were all dying, and with them, the
oral history of their time. Of what the game was really like.
“Then I was influenced by the father and son team of John and
Alan Lomax, who traveled the country in the ‘30s and ‘40s
with primitive tape recorders seeking out old and almost forgotten American
folksongs, and by the book “Hear Me Talkin’ To Ya: The Story
of Jazz Told by the Men Who Made it,” by Nat Hentoff and Nat Shapiro,
which was published in 1955. The subtitle of ‘Glory’ became ‘The
Story of the Early Days of Baseball Told By the Men Who Played It.’
“Finally, there was a trip to Easton, Maryland, to meet with
Bill Veeck. I had just read ‘Veeck as in Wreck,’ and felt
like I knew him, so I called him up and asked if my project seemed feasible.
He said ‘come on down and let’s talk about it,’ and
he encouraged me to get started.”
Accompanied by
a 25-pound Tandberg, reel-to-reel tape recorder (hence the two hernias),
and by his son
Stephen, who
would operate it, Ritter
visited with 33 players from the early days of the 20th century. Twenty-two
appeared in the book (the others were thought to be not up to par for
various reasons), with the current edition having increased the roster
to 26 of the 33. (Do we hear a clamoring for “The Lost Interviews?)
Among the 22
were Rube Marquard, Harry Hooper, Sam Crawford, Joe Wood, Tommy Leach,
Chief Meyers and
Fred
Snodgrass. (Crawford and Leach actually
played in the 19th Century). The players told not only their own life
stories, but tales of famous teammates and opponents so that Cobb’s
personality or McGraw’s temper were revealed. Ritter omitted his
own questions, and did little editing to the tapes, but his skill at
turning the conversations into prose turned the book into an instant
classic.
An enthusiastic front page review by Wilfred Sheed in the New York
Times Book Section immediately made fans take notice, and while the book
never hit the best seller list, it has been in print for virtually all
of the last 35 years, selling 360,000 copies, with royalties of nearly
a quarter million dollars.
It didn’t make anyone rich; Ritter divided the payments among
the 22 men in the original book and their estates, and continued to write
them royalty checks into the mid-‘80s when he sent everyone a check
for $500 and said “this is it: the $500 represents the present
value of all future royalty payments.” So Ritter has earned less
than $35,000 on this classic. For most of the players however, mostly
pension-less, the payment was warmly received and Ritter kept in touch
with player widows for years.
Everyone in the book, and their wives, has since passed away.
An LP with excerpts
from the tapes, appeared in 1966 and sold fewer than 1,000 copies.
Bud Greenspan
produced a
one-hour PBS special based
on “Glory” in 1975, which still appears occasionally on ESPN.
The Sporting News marketed it as a home video in 1986.
Morrow took over
publication in 1984, adding four men, and then putting out a Quill
trade paperback
in ’92. Other editions have been published
by Collier Books, Holtzman Press, Vintage Books and Easton Press, as
well as a CD of the original interviews, in 1998, from HighBridge. (There
was virtually no profanity from the players on the tapes, probably owing
to Ritter’s son being in the room, he believes). A first edition
hard cover with dust jacket is worth about $120 today, off the $7.95
original price.
The original tapes are in the Hall of Fame library, with a copy in
the Notre Dame library after the school requested them.
Ritter is a renowned and much-published economist, but his love for
baseball, which resulted in his dogged pursuit of these players, gave
America a book for the ages.
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