Havana Heat

Havana Heat is a novel published in 2000 by Darryl Brock. It is a fictionalized story about a real historical figure, Dummy Taylor, a deaf baseball player who played professional baseball in the years 1900‒1908.

Havana Heat

Original paperback cover of Havana Heat
Author Darryl Brock
Country United States
Language English
Genre Baseball fiction novel
Publisher Total/Sports Illustrated
Publication date
April 2000
Media type

Print (Hardback & Paperback)


Audio
Pages 304pp (original hardcover)
ISBN 1-892129-23-X (original hardcover)
OCLC 43760201

Plot summary

In 1911, Taylor, a former big-league pitcher, has been sent down to the minor leagues at age 37 due to problems with his pitching arm. He longs for a second chance and approaches his former manager, John McGraw, about re-joining the New York Giants. Short of players, McGraw eventually agrees to take him on a post-season exhibition trip to play baseball in Cuba, where the political atmosphere is tense in the aftermath of the Spanish–American War. During the games in Cuba, Taylor is introduced to a promising Cuban prospect who is also deaf. Taylor encounters moral dilemmas as he balances his desire to return to the big leagues against difficult issues involving racism, discrimination, disability, fading dreams, and the sports philosophy of winning at any cost.

Characters

Themes

Relationship to Baseball

The book is based on a real deaf pitcher, Dummy Taylor. All of the major league players mentioned in the novel are all based on real ballplayers on the Giants at that time. Dummy played for the New York Giants from 1900 to 1908. There is no information that indicates that he played in Cuba at any time. Dummy did go on to coach at his alma mater, The Kansas School for the Deaf, as well as two other schools, and was a major inspiration to all those around him.[1]

Reception

Havana Heat won the Dave Moore Award in 2000 for the "most important baseball book" published that year. This award is given out by the Elysian Fields Quarterly, a literary baseball journal.[2]

Further reading

References

  1. Baseball Biography Project Dummy Taylor listing
  2. Elysian Fields Quarterly website
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, December 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.