Fidel Castro and Baseball
The Untold Story
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Rowman & Littlefield
Published:12th Nov '18
Should be back in stock very soon
Few political figures of the modern age have been so vilified as Fidel Castro, and both the vilification and worship generated by the Cuban leader have combined to distort the true image of Castro. The baseball myths attached to Fidel have loomed every bit as large as the skewed political notions that surround him. Castro was never a major league pitching prospect, nor did he destroy the Cuban national pastime in 1962. In Fidel Castro and Baseball: The Untold Story, Peter C. Bjarkman dispels numerous myths about the Cuban leader and his association with baseball. In this groundbreaking study, Bjarkman establishes how Fidel constructed, rather than dismantled, Cuba’s true baseball Golden Age—one that followed rather than preceded the 1959 revolution. Bjarkman also demonstrates that Fidel was not at all unique in “politicizing” baseball as often maintained, since the island sport traces its roots to the 19th-century revolution. Fidel’s avowed devotion to a non-materialist society would ultimately sow the seeds of collapse for the baseball empire he built over more than a half-century, just as the same obsession would finally dismantle the larger social revolution he had painstakingly authored. A fascinating look at a controversial figure and his impact on a major sport, this volume reveals many intriguing insights about Castro and how his love of the game was tied to Cuba’s identity. Fidel Castro and Baseball will appeal to fans of the sport as well as to those interested in Cuba’s enduring association with baseball.
In this thorough history, Bjarkman examines Cuba’s baseball leagues after Fidel Castro’s rise to power in 1959, . . . Bjarkman’s insightful survey of Castro-era baseball deserves a broad audience. * Publishers Weekly *
Peter Bjarkman is by far the number one American authority on Cuban baseball and the Cuban government's role in it. When I want to know something about Cuban baseball, he is the first, and only person, I call. As in all his previous works about Cuban baseball, Bjarkman dispels long-held myths. Whether or not you agree with his take on Castro's role in the development of Cuban baseball, you will find this a fascinating read. -- Eric Nadel, Texas Rangers Radio Announcer, 2014 Winner Ford C. Frick Award, National Baseball Hall of Fame
[Thi] well researched and knowledgeable volume . . . should be treasured by baseball historians and students of international relations, as well as, anyone interested in baseball, Cuba, and American foreign policy.” * New York Journal of Books *
Peter Bjarkman deserves the largest hurrah for his exceptional research, analysis, and captivating writing style in detaching myth from reality, debunking long established political and sporting biases, and ultimately detailing the extraordinary story of Fidel Castro and baseball. It would have been easy to accept past reporting follies, or to reduce diplomatic matters to good and bad guys, and even turn a complex individual like Castro into a cartoon character. Fortunately he avoids this trap by choosing the much harder route of examining motives and “paths not taken” with a critical but often sympathetic eye. We the reader are the wiser and better served by a book in which the conflicted nature of major league baseball’s interests and those of the Cuban baseball establishment operate within the larger arena of history’s judgment. -- William Humber, baseball historian, 2018 inductee into the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame
Peter Bjarkman’s Fidel Castro and Baseball navigates the complex dynamics of Castro, baseball, and Cuban-American relations with authority and attitude. The author provides context, flavor, and history—and debunks myths—with fervor and passion. -- Todd Radom, author and graphic designer for professional sports teams and events
Misconceptions, often willful, abound about Cuba. With the recent opening to that nation, now’s the time to set the record straight. Given baseball’s central place in its culture, the sport provides a revealing window into the real Cuba. To understand baseball’s role in post-revolutionary Cuba, few people are as qualified as Peter Bjarkman to capture the story, given his long years immersed in the sport on the island nation. In this book, he exposes the myths and illuminates the realities behind Fidel Castro’s own baseball prospects, his revolutionary uses for the sport, and Cuban baseball’s professional-to-amateur transition. Bjarkman provides the first, detailed account of baseball in Cuba after the revolution (and in its current status today) while also demystifying Castro and his revolutionary objectives. This is a well-written, compelling story, filled with surprising anecdotes. Highly recommended. -- Robert Elias, author of The Empire Strikes Out and Baseball and the American Dream
For nearly three decades Peter C. Bjarkman has been the preeminent English-language interpreter of the magic and mystery of Cuban baseball. Reaching beyond the romance and the rhythms of the island, he has been our guide to the passion, pride, and religious devotion to a different kind of game, one long hidden from U.S. fans just 90 miles off their own shores. In his latest effort, perhaps his most important to date, Bjarkman blends that unique knowledge in an uncompromising work that refutes some of the most durable myths about the Cuban game and its chief benefactor, Fidel Castro. -- Kevin Baxter, sports writer, Los Angeles Times
Like an ace hurler on the mound, Bjarkman certainly has “great stuff!” He fires off and delivers a masterful, precise, and thoroughly-researched chronology of the real story of Fidel Castro’s Cuba and baseball. Dispelling decades-old misinformation, Bjarkman enlightens readers to the truth. This one bats 1.000! -- Byron Motley, author and photographer of Embracing Cuba
With Fidel Castro and Baseball, Peter C. Bjarkman drives the readers to one of the most complex personalities of the 20th century. Peter, once again controversial, breaks traditional barriers to bring down many myths about Fidel Castro's relationship with baseball. All readers, whatever their political views, will find much to stimulate their thinking in this book. -- Ray Otero, director of BaseballdeCuba.com
Peter Bjarkman’s meticulously-researched volume thoroughly illuminates a blind spot long shared by Fidel Castro’s many biographers and Cuba historians: the crucial role that baseball has played in the Cuban Revolution. In the process, Fidel Castro and Baseball establishes how baseball itself came to be an indispensable cog in a sports machine inextricably intertwined with the Revolution’s political ideals—one that shared the latter’s failings and miscalculations. But the book’s most important contribution is its demystification of Fidel’s own relationship to the island nation’s beloved game, and the debunking, once and for all, of the persistent myth of Fidel as would-have-been MLB pitcher. Required reading for anyone who cares about either Cuba or baseball, or both. -- Alfred J. López, author of José Martí: A Revolutionary Life
Bjarkman’s exhaustive research paints a detailed history of baseball on the island after the revolution in 1959 and delves into the politicization of the wildly popular game and diplomatic relations with baseball and government in America . . . Bjarkman’s rich history is a grand slam addition to Cuban and baseball history. * Library Journal *
- Winner of Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2019
- Winner of SABR Baseball Research Award 2019
ISBN: 9781538110300
Dimensions: 237mm x 161mm x 35mm
Weight: 717g
400 pages