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| Customer Reviews: | | Average Customer Review: ( 3 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 12 found the following review helpful:
What a waste Apr 11, 2006
By Mr. Paul E. Gamboa
"Paul G."
Besides the plentiful typos, including repeated paragraphs and the end of one chapter missing, this book is a complete waste of money and time. Keep in mind this is coming from someone who is about as die hard as they come about the White Sox. The book adds very little insight into anything going on behind the scenes throughout last season. I'm serious, there's no lockerroom stories that anyone who followed the team didn't know. There's little about the emotions of the players, almost a total lack of observations from individual players, and pretty much nothing that anyone with a Tribune subscription didn't already know. Anyone who watched the World Champions play regularly last seaons could have written this book and added more personal stories than were here. The White Sox deserve better than rewriting Tribune Ozzie columns from last year and turing the box scores into different chapters. The White Sox deserve far better than this. The only thing that keeps it from getting 0 stars is doing a nice job of keeping track of how many times Jay Mariotti did a bout face in his opinion of the team. Criminally overpriced and woefully lacking any original insight or stories. At over 20 dollars, I feel cheated. With all the characters on this team, a better book should have been written. I highly advise to pass on this without a second thought.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Could have been so much better had production not been so rushed May 14, 2006
By Raymond C. Ruether I'll agree with the previous reviewer regarding the hasty and apparently haphazard production of this book, however I feel the book as a whole rated a little better. I also noticed the typos and the repeated paragraph (regarding the 1979 concerts at old Comiskey Park that decimated the playing field), not to mention the chapter ending with an incomplete sentence. One glaring factual error that jumped out at me referred to the 8th inning of World Series Game #4; according to the book, Willie Harris remained at second base after Carl Everett grounded out, when in fact Harris moved up to third base on that play before eventually scoring the decisive run on Jermaine Dye's single. I certainly agree that the relatively poor proofreading job can be attributed to the rush to get the book on the market (and perhaps these errors can be rectified in a subsequent print run), however while this book is not nearly as in-depth as it could have been this is still a pretty good read of an unforgettable White Sox World Championship season.
Exciting but Flawed Oct 14, 2008
By K.A.Goldberg This book primarily reviews the exciting postseason of the 2005 World Champions. The 2005 White Sox held first place the entire year, posted the league's best record (99-63), went 11-1 in postseason, and swept the World Series. The only other team to lead wire-to-wire, post the top record, and sweep the Series? The 1927 New York Yankees of Babe Ruth and Lou Gherig. As a Sox fan, it's nice to relive those glorious wins against defending-champion Boston, a tough Angels squad, and the hard-fighting Houston Astros, who had the winning or go-ahead run in scoring position in the late inning of every game. I also liked reading player backgrounds on A.J. Piercynski, Paul Konerko, Jermaine Dye, Mark Buerhle, Bobby Jenks, etc. Chicago certainly was proud of its 2005 White Sox, a scrappy underdog team of solid pitching/defense that perservered despite less money and less media coverage than the big-money Cubs. Actually, until 2005 the White Sox had appeared in just one World Series (1959) since the scandal-plagued Black Sox of 1919.
Unfortunately, this book is a rather haphazard rush job in need of serious editing and more information. Chicagoans waited 88 years (since 1917) for a World Series winner; we deserve a better effort.
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