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Camelot: A View From the Dugout


Article # : 14196 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 7 / 1988  2,317 Words
Author : James P. Brosnan
James P. Brosnan is a journalist and author of Pennant Race and The Long Season.

       SEASON OF GLORY
       The Amazing Saga of the 1961 New York Yankees
       Ralph Houk and Robert W. Creamer
       New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1988
       320 PP., $18.95
       
        A distinctive memoir leaves its imprint on the sands of time. In Season of Glory Ralph Houk and Robert W. Creamer have collaborated in focusing on a significant slice of American history. The year was 1961, the advent of the Kennedy administration. It was trumpeted as a new era and an age of enlightenment, a time when the White House would become known as "Camelot on the Potomac."
       
        John F. Kennedy, hatless and handsome for his inaugural speech, challenged the citizenry to "ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country." Kennedy minions, the best and brightest of the eastern establishment, promised that the United States, under Democratic leadership, would once again be No. 1 in the world.
       
        It was a glorious spectacle, those first days of '61. But by the fall the country was in a political and military mess; the champagne had soured, and Camelot had tarnished.
       
        But all was not ill that year in the United States. There was a band of doughty Yankees, conquering all opponents, making history. Ralph Houk, a decorated Army hero, was their leader. Although he was just making his debut as the New York Yankees manager, Houk was supremely confident about his team's prospects, even in ... (1999 of 12459 Characters)
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