The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams

( 7 )

Overview

At long last, the epic biography Ted Williams deserves—and that his fans have been waiting for.

Williams was the best hitter in baseball history. His batting average of .406 in 1941 has not been topped since, and no player who has hit more than 500 home runs has a higher career batting average. Those totals would have been even higher if Williams had not left baseball for nearly five years in the prime of his career to serve as a Marine pilot in WWII and Korea. He hit home runs ...

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Overview

At long last, the epic biography Ted Williams deserves—and that his fans have been waiting for.

Williams was the best hitter in baseball history. His batting average of .406 in 1941 has not been topped since, and no player who has hit more than 500 home runs has a higher career batting average. Those totals would have been even higher if Williams had not left baseball for nearly five years in the prime of his career to serve as a Marine pilot in WWII and Korea. He hit home runs farther than any player before him—and traveled a long way himself, as Ben Bradlee, Jr.'s grand biography reveals. Born in 1918 in San Diego, Ted would spend most of his life disguising his Mexican heritage. During his 22 years with the Boston Red Sox, Williams electrified crowds across America—and shocked them, too: His notorious clashes with the press and fans threatened his reputation. Yet while he was a God in the batter's box, he was profoundly human once he stepped away from the plate. His ferocity came to define his troubled domestic life. While baseball might have been straightforward for Ted Williams, life was not.

THE KID is biography of the highest literary order, a thrilling and honest account of a legend in all his glory and human complexity. In his final at-bat, Williams hit a home run. Bradlee's marvelous book clears the fences, too.

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Editorial Reviews

The New York Times - Bruce Weber
A work of obvious journalistic muscle and diligence, The Kid provides documentary evidence on every page to bolster the book's presumption that Williams was, to use the cliché, larger than life…Mr. Bradlee…writes a graceful sentence and crafts a cogent paragraph. His authorial attitude is one of restraint, generally letting the flood of his facts and quotations from interviews speak for themselves.
The New York Times Book Review - Charles McGrath
What distinguishes Bradlee's The Kid from the rest of Williams lit is, first of all, its size…and the depth of its reporting. Bradlee seemingly talked to everyone, not just baseball people…and he had unparalleled access to Williams family archives. His account does not materially alter our picture of Williams the player, but fills it in with much greater detail and nuance…Bradlee also devotes almost half his book to Williams's life after baseball, something that would have enraged the Kid…who loved fame but considered his private life off limits. But Bradlee's expansiveness enables his book to transcend the familiar limits of the sports bio and to become instead a hard-to-put-down account of a fascinating American life. It's a story about athletic greatness but also about the perils of fame and celebrity, the corrosiveness of money and the way the cycle of familial resentment and disappointment plays itself out generation after generation.
Publishers Weekly
01/27/2014
The story of Ted Williams contains more twists and turns than the great American novel, and in this epic biography, former Boston Globe editor and investigative reporter Bradlee presents an often disturbing portrayal of the man perpetually known as "The Kid." The first major book about Williams since Leigh Montville's Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero published within two years of the 2002 death of baseball's greatest hitter at age 83, Bradlee focuses on elements of the Hall of Famer's life overshadowed by his still-historic .406 batting average in 1941, including his two wartime stints in the military at the height of his playing career, cantankerous relationships with fans and journalists, and the sad end-of-life saga perpetuated by his three reproachable children that concluded with the controversial cryonic preservation of Williams's head and decapitated body at a nondescript facility in Scottsdale, Ariz. Drawing on more than 10 years of research and 600-plus interviews, Bradlee explores Williams's Hispanic heritage and troubled childhood that left him feeling "ashamed," provides possible reasons for his irrational anger, and offers new insight into the cryonics case. Despite a few extraneous chapters, this big book rewards patient readers with as complete a portrait of Williams as history likely will allow. (Dec.)
From the Publisher
"Bradlee's sumptuous biography details an extraordinary American life while showing us how that life morphed into legend. The Kid reads like an epic, starting before Williams's birth in 1918, outlining his Anglo and Mexican heritage growing up in Southern California, and continuing after his death in 2002 to the present. Bradlee has given us the fullest exploration yet of his monumental ego and the best explanation for his vast inferiority complex....The book is packed with great moments." —-Allen Barra, Boston Globe

"What distinguishes Bradlee's The Kid from the rest of Williams lit is, its size and the depth of its reporting. Bradlee seemingly talked to everyone, not just baseball people but Williams's fishing buddies, old girlfriends, his two surviving wives and both of his daughters, and he had unparalleled access to Williams family archives. His account does not materially alter our picture of Williams the player, but fills it in with much greater detail and nuance....Bradlee's expansiveness enables his book to transcend the familiar limits of the sports bio and to become instead a hard-to-put-down account of a fascinating American life. It's a story about athletic greatness but also about the perils of fame and celebrity, the corrosiveness of money and the way the cycle of familial resentment and disappointment plays itself out generation after generation." —-Charles McGrath, New York Times Book Review

"Superb....Ted Williams hated what he considered invasions of his privacy, but perfectionist that he was, he would probably have to concede that the work ethic that underpins The Kid is exemplary. Mr. Bradlee, who was a reporter and editor at the Boston Globe for 25 years, spent 10 years researching and writing this book; he interviewed about 600 people and seems to have read everything about and by Williams. But research alone doesn't make The Kid a first-rate biography. The author was able to organize the great mass of data into a lucid and readable whole and-most important-bring his subject and the people around him to provocative and stormy life. When I began reading this book, I thought that only baseball fans would find it interesting. But after finishing The Kid, I suspect that even those indifferent to the sport might find its human drama absorbing." —-Howard Schneider, Wall Street Journal

"Fun to read....The prose is breezy, the research and reporting are impeccable....This book very much sets out to be the definitive document of a great, complicated, fascinating person and ultimately, it succeeds....The context Bradlee provides—-the heavy detailing, the quotes and anecdotes—-brings the reader inside Williams's psychology, to the extent that that's possible....You're happy for everything you've learned in this giant book. Because it has portrayed the man in full." —-Dave Bry, Slate

"Fans seeking a complete picture of the beloved star who inspired a slew of nicknames now have but one place to turn. This complex figure comes to life in The Kid, an absorbing 854-page biography by longtime Boston Globe reporter and editor Ben Bradlee Jr. Based on some 600 interviews that reflect more than a decade of research, this is surely the definitive Ted Williams book....Bradlee's brilliant account is required reading for any Red Sox fan. It's also a fascinating portrait of a complex character that a baseball agnostic or even a Yankees fan will find hard to put down." —-Jerry Harkavy, Associated Press

"A work of obvious journalistic muscle and diligence, The Kid provides documentary evidence on every page to bolster the book's presumption that Williams was, to use the cliché, larger than life....Mr. Bradlee writes a graceful sentence and crafts a cogent paragraph. His authorial attitude is one of restraint, generally letting the flood of his facts and quotations from interviews speak for themselves." —-Bruce Weber, New York Times

"Required reading." —-Billy Heller, New York Post

Ken Burns
"The barnacles of sentimentality and nostalgia that beset a look backward into the 'golden age' of baseball suggest that we would never know about that complicated genius of the plate Ted Williams. But here he is, fully realized with all the glory and guts and all the controversial and all-too-real aspects of this human being intact. Bravo.''
Peter Gammons
"I love this book. Ben Bradlee Jr's epic study of Ted Williams, The Kid, is a fascinating exploration into the mind of a complicated artistic genius. Like so many artists and baseball giants, Williams had a raging insecurity that Bradlee captures. This is not a baseball biography, it is the portrait of an artist from an immigrant background to arguably the greatest moment in All Star Game history in 1999.''
Daniel Okrent
"You think you know the Ted Williams story? If you haven't read Ben Bradlee Jr.'s, The Kid, you're not even close. Bradlee's prodigious research, conducted over nearly a decade, yields a Williams even more independent-minded, even more gifted, and even more cantankerous than the one we think we recall."
Jane Leavy
"In The Kid, Ben Bradlee Jr. gives us a man in full. And, oh, what a man Ted Williams was: baseball aesthete, war hero, angler, paterfamilias of a dysfunctional family that won't let him rest in peace. In this definitive, panoramic portrait, Bradlee recounts the giddy heights of baseball's last .400 hitter and his descent into an ignominious afterlife. The scourge of Fenway Park scribes has finally met his match.''
Bob Costas
"Over decades now, much has been written about Ted Williams, a good bit of it of considerable literary and journalistic merit. But Ben Bradlee Jr's The Kid ranks as the most comprehensive -- revealing facts, anecdotes and insights which add to the record, and will be of fresh interest to even the most ardent Williams followers.''
Dan Shaughnessy
"I thought I knew everything there was to know about Ted Williams. I was wrong. Ben Bradlee Jr.'s reporting skills bring us Teddy Ballgame as we have never seen him before. There are some uncomfortable truths here, but The Kid should stand as the final word on the greatest hitter who ever lived.''
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2013-11-26
Sprawling, entertaining life of the baseball great, renowned as a sports hero while leading a life as checkered as Babe Ruth's or Ty Cobb's. "My name is Ted Fuckin' Williams and I'm the greatest hitter in baseball." So recited Williams, by Boston Globe editor Bradlee's account, as a mantra before each game, "interrupting it only occasionally to offer a lecture on the finer points of hitting to anyone who cared to listen." He had the credentials to deliver such lectures, of course; Bradlee does indeed acknowledge him as "the greatest hitter who ever lived," and few in baseball have bettered Williams' numbers. Like Ruth, Williams was a bruiser with a chip on his shoulder; like Cobb, race was his bête noire, for, as Bradlee reveals, Williams had a Mexican mother and took great pains to conceal that ancestry, both fearful of discrimination and perhaps with an element of self-loathing. Williams had a reputation as a military hero as well, which he did nothing to gainsay, even if he did his best to stay out of the draft in World War II and resisted his reactivation during the Korean War. Williams ended life with a bit of sideways fame as well, having been decapitated and frozen after death in a cryonics venture that did not end well; Bradlee's description of the macabre proceedings is not for the faint of heart. The author dishes plenty--one of the kindest things he says about Williams as a human being was that he was "self-absorbed"--but the repeated demonstrations of flawed character do nothing to diminish Williams' outsized stature as a player. Bradlee is as enthusiastic as Vin Scully or Harry Caray when it comes to describing Williams on the field: "He allowed three hits, one run, walked none, and struck out Rudy York on three pitches. The move seemed an attempt…to placate angry fans with some pure entertainment in one of the worst losses of the year." An outstanding addition to the literature of baseball.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780316614351
  • Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
  • Publication date: 12/3/2013
  • Pages: 864
  • Sales rank: 39105
  • Product dimensions: 6.40 (w) x 9.30 (h) x 2.10 (d)

Meet the Author

Ben Bradlee, Jr., spent 25 years at the Boston Globe as a reporter and editor, overseeing as deputy managing editor, among many critically acclaimed stories, the Globe's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

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Read an Excerpt

The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams


By Ben Bradlee

Little, Brown and Company

Copyright © 2013 Ben Bradlee
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-316-61435-1


CHAPTER 1

Shame


Ted was always ashamed of his upbringing.

Ashamed of his mother, the Salvation Army devotee and fixture of Depression-era San Diego who seemed far more committed to her street mission than she was to raising her two sons.

Ashamed of his largely absent and indifferent father, who ran a cheesy downtown photo studio that catered to San Diego's sailors and their floozies, and who had a fondness for the bottle.

Ashamed of his younger brother—a gun-toting petty miscreant always one step ahead of the law—who bitterly resented Ted's fame and success.

This sense of shame manifested itself in a reluctance to talk about his family with friends, outsiders, and especially reporters—at least until he was much older and out of baseball.

But there was one aspect of his family life that Ted for many years decided to conceal outright. It was one of the most interesting parts of his background, an important element that did not emerge publicly until near the end of his life: the fact that he was half Mexican—on his mother's side.

Based on Ted's All-American appearance and his white-bread last name, this was an improbable revelation, but that did not stop Hispanic activists from claiming him as one of their own. Not long before he died, Williams became the first inductee into the fledgling Hispanic Heritage Baseball Museum Hall of Fame.

May Williams was the second of eight children born to Pablo Venzor and the former Natalia Hernandez, a native of Chihuahua, Mexico. Pablo, a mason, married Natalia in 1888. Natalia had a brother who worked in the Mexican government, and the family, feeling vulnerable to Pancho Villa and the coming revolution, emigrated from Chihuahua to Santa Barbara, California, in 1907.

As immigrants often do in their effort to assimilate in a new country, some of the Venzors sought to play down their roots south of the border and claimed a Basque, or "Basco," heritage with a strain variously said to have been French or Spanish. May's younger sister Sarah Venzor Diaz, who died in 1999 at the age of ninety-four, went so far as to tell writer Bill Nowlin: "We have no Mexican heritage in our family. We are Basque." And she suggested that attempts by writers to delve into Ted's Mexican background were a slur against him.

Yet genealogical research reveals that May's Mexican roots extended back at least three generations—as far as records could be traced. No records on Pablo's side could be found, but interviews with surviving Venzor family members reveal nothing to indicate that his lineage is not cemented in Mexico as well. The Venzors' sensitivity probably reflected the fact that in Mexico, those with European or Anglo roots are often more socially esteemed than those with "indio," or indigenous, roots. This tension was also evident in the next generation of Venzors—Ted's cousins and May's nieces and nephews.

"We were fruit pickers," said Frank Venzor, son of May's younger brother Paul, speaking of the extended family.

"My dad was no fruit picker," replied Frank's sister Carolyn Ortiz.

"The hell he wasn't," said Frank, who, in a private interview later, sarcastically offered the Venzor family line on their Mexican roots: "We're not fruit pickers per se. We're Basques. We don't come from Mexico. We just happened to be passing through. My uncle Bruno would say, 'I ain't no Mexican! I'm a French Canadian!' "

If those sentiments represented normal immigrant sensitivity to what the Venzors perceived as the garden-variety prejudice of the day, Ted thought he had much more at stake. Coming of age as a baseball player in the 1930s, he decided then to hide his Mexican heritage for fear that deeply ingrained prejudice in baseball would hurt his career. He maintained silence on the topic throughout his tenure with the Red Sox and beyond.

"Ted didn't want anyone to know he was part Mexican," said longtime friend Al Cassidy, the executor of Ted's estate. "It concerned him. He was afraid they wouldn't let him play. He'd say, 'It was an entirely different time back then.'"

In late 1939, after Ted's sensational rookie season with the Red Sox, he returned home to San Diego for a visit, the conquering hero. But when a gaggle of his relatives on the Mexican side of the family gathered to meet him at the train station, Ted beat a hasty retreat after spotting the ragtag group from afar.

According to one of Ted's relatives who was there, Williams took "one look at this big group of Mexicans, and he says, 'Oh, my goodness, my career is down the drain if I'm seen with these people,' and he walks away."

Carolyn Ortiz said that when she was about twelve, "Aunt May called and told us Ted was going to be coming through Santa Barbara and he'd stop for a visit. Well, you would have thought the pope was coming. My aunt Jeanne painted the house inside and out. They had us kids cleaning and making all kinds of preparations. But when the day came, he didn't show up. He never even called. That's the way he was."

Several years later, a host of Venzors traveled to Los Angeles to watch Ted and the Red Sox play an exhibition game against the Los Angeles Angels, then a Pacific Coast League team. When the Venzors hollered and waved at him from the stands, Ted made a motion to indicate that he would see them later, but he never did. "All the family went to root him on and he didn't have the guts to come over and say hi to them," said Ted's cousin Rosalie Larson.

Another cousin, Salvador Herrera, used to spar with Ted about denying his roots. "Ted was a Mexican," Herrera said. "He was embarrassed to be a Mexican. He wanted to be an American, a gringo. I said, 'You asshole, you're a Mexican! Say you're a Mexican and say the Mexicans are the best hitters in the world.' I used to push his button. He laughed and he'd say, 'I'm Basco.' He wanted people to think he was Basque. But he was Mexican, just like me. He just laughed me off. He'd say, 'Don't tell nobody' and hang up the phone."

Years after he retired, Ted did say in his book: "If I had my mother's name, there is no doubt I would have run into problems in those days, the prejudices people had in Southern California." In My Turn at Bat, published in 1969, he even misspelled his mother's maiden name as "Venzer," and devoted just one line to her heritage, saying she was "part Mexican and part French." Herrera thought the misspelling was deliberate. "Venzer with an e, that's the way Basque people spell it. Hispanics, it's Venzor with an o." Yet no reporter developed this theme or dug into his Mexican heritage until Nowlin explored some of the Venzor family lineage in an article for the Boston Globe Magazine published in June of 2002, a month before Ted died.

The Venzors were a colorful collection of cowboys, longshoremen, evangelicals, bricklayers, sandlot ballplayers, and truck drivers. And many of them had serious drinking problems.

The patriarch, Pablo Venzor, was a stonemason and a sheepherder. Occasionally he would also get work as an extra at Flying A Studios, a onetime Hollywood outpost in Santa Barbara, but he finally quit in a huff after being cast as a Mexican peon once too often. Pablo died in 1920 at the age of fifty-two.

His widow, Natalia, never remarried and would outlive her husband by thirty-four years. Natalia chopped wood, rolled her own Bull Durham cigarettes, and never learned to speak or write English. She raised eight children (two others died in childbirth) and also watched over most of them as adults from the family's Santa Barbara base at 1008 Chino Street. Son Bruno lived next door at 1006 Chino, son Paul was at 1002, youngest daughter, Jeanne, lived across the street, and daughter Mary lived several blocks away, at 1716 Chino.

The oldest of Natalia's brood, born in 1889, was Pedro Venzor, known as Pete. A World War I veteran, Pete was a working cowboy at Santa Barbara's Tecolote Ranch, whose owners would stage grand barbecues that attracted California political notables and Hollywood cowboys like Will Rogers, Gene Autry, and Tex Ritter. Several of Pete's siblings worked stints at Tecolote at various times, and Ted visited the ranch as a boy.

Ted's mother, May, was born next, on May 8, 1891, though there is confusion about her place of birth. On her 1913 marriage license, she wrote that she was a native of Mexico. But in 1918, on Ted's birth certificate, she wrote that she was born in El Paso, Texas, though the city has no record of that. (On the 1920 US census she said her native language was Spanish.)

The next Venzor child, Mary, was born in Mexico in 1893, according to her marriage license. Thus it appears more likely that in 1891, the Venzors were still in Mexico and that May was born there, too. In 1895, son Daniel arrived.

May and Mary were "inseparable," according to Mary's daughter Teresa Cordero Contreras, the youngest of twelve children, who said the sisters always stayed in close touch until Mary's life ended tragically in 1943, when she and her daughter Annie were murdered by Annie's husband, who then killed himself.

Daniel was killed in World War I on November 11, 1918, the day the armistice was signed. This made Natalia a Gold Star Mother, and provided benefits that financed the purchase of her home at 1008 Chino in 1920.

The Venzor sibling who had the greatest influence on Ted's baseball development was Saul, born in 1903. He was a longshoreman and an accomplished ballplayer himself, a pitcher who managed the local semipro team, the Santa Barbara Merchants. Saul was about six foot five, with arms that dangled down to his knees and huge hands.

When May brought young Ted to Santa Barbara for visits, the boy would gravitate to his uncle Saul and pester him to play catch. Saul would turn these sessions into tough-love tutorials. The driveway at 1008 Chino was slanted; Saul would stand at the top and put Ted at the bottom, and challenge him to stand in there and see if he could hit any of the nineteen different pitches that Saul boasted he threw.

Saul would taunt and tease Ted, belittling his ability. "Ted picked his brain on how to throw a curve," said Manuel Herrera, Salvador's brother. "Saul wouldn't let Ted pitch to him, told him he wasn't mature enough yet." Sometimes Ted would cry in frustration after the driveway sessions, wishing he were bigger and stronger.

Natalia thought her son was being too harsh. "Grandma used to lean out the window and say, 'Leave that kid alone,'" remembered Dee Allen, Saul's daughter. "May would, too. My dad liked to do things and do them right. He would challenge Ted, to teach him."

Ted had seen Saul pitch in a sandlot game once and was duly impressed. Saul had gotten into a bases-loaded, no-outs jam. He then called time, walked over to the opposing team's bench, and took bets that he would get out of the inning without that team scoring a run. Saul collected the bets, then went back out and retired the side without further damage. "Ted was there and saw this, and told the story at a family barbecue," said David Allen, Dee's husband.

According to unconfirmed Venzor family lore, Saul also struck out Babe Ruth in 1935, after Ruth had retired and barnstormed through Santa Barbara. "Saul did this while he was playing with a bunch of ragtag Mexicans," said Salvador Herrera with some sense of awe.

Ted was closest to the next Venzor, Sarah, because she had come to San Diego and done yeoman duty helping to raise him as May worked the streets for the Salvation Army, and also because it was Sarah who would take care of May in her final days in Santa Barbara.

After Natalia, the Venzor matriarch, died, Sarah took over the main house at 1008 Chino, along with her husband, Arnold Diaz, a musician who had a mariachi band. Sarah became the backbone of the family and its chief caretaker. She would tend to her brothers when they went off on benders, and after her sister Mary and niece Annie were murdered, Sarah helped raise Annie's son, Manuel Herrera, and his twin sister, Natalie.

For many years, Sarah served as Ted's point of contact with the family. "Ted would say to Sarah, 'I'm coming on such and such a date, and don't you dare tell anyone that I'm there.' He didn't want to see any of the other relatives," said Ruth Gonzalez, May's first cousin.

If Ted called for Sarah and someone else answered the phone, he couldn't keep track of who was who. "Ted called one day out of the blue," Dee Allen recalled. " 'Hello, this is Ted; who's this?' 'This is Dee.' 'Who's Dee?' 'I'm Saul's daughter.' He asked what Sarah needed. Whatever I felt needed to be done—a new roof, windows, a wooden fence—I got bids for all that stuff and sent them to his office. Ted was a hard person to get into. You could only get so close. He wouldn't allow it."

Ted also enjoyed his uncle Bruno Venzor because they both liked to fish. Bruno was an excitable, happy-go-lucky sort who had a stutter. He drove a cement truck and also played some baseball, but not as seriously as his brother Saul. Once, when Bruno was pitching, he kept laughing at the hitters, and an irritated Saul yanked him from the game. Bruno was active in the Elks club and liked to dress up in Western duds. Arnold Diaz called him the sheriff of Chino Street.

May's life calling, superseding all else, was to be a foot soldier in the Salvation Army. Founded in England in 1865, the Army is an evangelical Christian group that considers itself a church but functions as a relief and social service organization whose adherents forswear drinking, smoking, drugs, and gambling. It rose to prominence by targeting and converting alcoholics, the homeless, drug addicts, unwed mothers, and prostitutes to Christianity. These were the kinds of people May tended to in a colorful mission that ranged from San Diego south to Tijuana and north to Los Angeles.

May was a beloved figure, a star of the street. Indeed, in San Diego during the Depression, "no woman was better known than Salvation May," wrote Joe Hamelin of the San Diego Union in a 1980 series the newspaper published about Ted. "In Salvation Army bonnet and flowing garb, she patrolled the streets in the '20s and '30s, collecting for the poor. Some thought her almost saintly. Others thought her eccentric, or simply a 'nut.' ... She knew everyone, and everyone knew her. She would take a downtown office building, start on the top floor, and work her way down without missing an office. There was no tougher job in Depression time than raising funds for charity. No one was better at her craft than May."

According to Alice Rasmussen, a colleague of May's in the Army: "She knew all the people in all the right places, and a lot of people in the wrong places, too. She had access to the mayor, the chief of police, business leaders, and she would go into the red light district—there was white slavery in those days—and minister there as well."

Kenny Bojens, who eventually became a sports columnist for the local paper, would run into May as she trolled the downtown bars making collections. "I used to run around with a legend of sorts, Gentleman Joe Morgan, the Union's police reporter," Bojens said in the 1980 Union series. "May used to call us her 'Sunshine Boys.' I remember this one night we were in a night club, the College Inn at Fourth and C, and we were flat broke. May came in, said, 'How are my little Sunshine Boys tonight?' and God-blessed the dickens out of us like she'd always do, and asked for a donation. I said, 'May, we don't even have the price of a beer,' which in those days was about 15 cents. And she reached down into her purse and said, 'Well, let the Army buy you one.' "

Another colleague was Alice Psaute, a lifelong Salvationist who made the rounds with May when she was a young woman. "We'd go to prizefights, and in intermissions we'd go around with a tambourine and try to collect money," Psaute said. "The smoke was so thick you could cut it with a knife. We'd also go to the county jail for meetings on Sunday morning. I played the violin. It made them better so they could get out sooner. May went to the jail many times."

So popular and influential was May that in 1924, John D. Spreckels, the richest man in San Diego, quietly paid off the note on the Williamses' house at 4121 Utah Street, where Ted grew up, in the city's North Park section. May had acquired the six-room house in December of 1923 for $4,000, agreeing to $20 monthly payments, plus interest, until the note was paid off. But by August 1, 1924, the note was discharged, courtesy of Spreckels, a sugar-refining industrialist, philanthropist, and publisher of both the San Diego Union and the San Diego Evening Tribune.

When Ted became a star, May would unabashedly trade on his celebrity for the greater good of the Army, telling startled bank or bar patrons, "I'm Ted Williams's mother. Empty your pockets." Worse, as far as Ted was concerned, she'd work Lane Field after he signed his first pro contract to play for the San Diego Padres of the Pacific Coast League, collecting money in the stands with her tambourine.
(Continues...)


Excerpted from The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams by Ben Bradlee. Copyright © 2013 Ben Bradlee. Excerpted by permission of Little, Brown and Company.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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Customer Reviews

Average Rating 3.5
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  • Posted Wed Dec 18 00:00:00 EST 2013

    I Also Recommend:

    Ted Williams was one of the greatest talents to ever take the ba

    Ted Williams was one of the greatest talents to ever take the baseball field and the new biography The Kid does his legacy justice. The book is very well researched and filled with insight into the life and career of this true baseball legend. Ben Bradlee Jr. knows how to write a compelling story!

    7 out of 7 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted Tue Feb 04 00:00:00 EST 2014

    Book is an in depth look at an icon of baseball and a disfunctio

    Book is an in depth look at an icon of baseball and a disfunctional disfunctional reulting from a parent who was dismissive and "never there".
    Ted, as depicted in the lengthy study, reflects the extreme as a driven individual to be perfect in his own view and expecting the world to conform to his self image of himself. The book depicts the sad relationship with his multi women including three failed marriages and the disaster at the end of his life with the ridiculous freezing of his head and torso. However all of his achievements in the baseball world were remarkable and depicted in the details of his career as were his varied talents serving in two wars.
    As a fan of Williams and living in the era of the 40's and 50's baseball idols it was a well studied story and kept my attention in spite of the length of the volume.
    .

    2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Fri Jan 10 00:00:00 EST 2014

    A lot of research

    Well researched, very thorough, I learned a lot about Ted Williams. I thought I,knew a lot about his life but I learned a lot. He was a most complex man. Could be the worst yet the best man. A very good book which I recommend.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Fri Jan 24 00:00:00 EST 2014

    I am reading it now. It is full of details and up close informat

    I am reading it now. It is full of details and up close information. Also a good read after you finish this is Hector's Juice.

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  • Posted Fri Jan 10 00:00:00 EST 2014

    No feedback, yet. It was given as a gift.

    No feedback: gift.

    0 out of 4 people found this review helpful.

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    Posted Sun Jan 12 00:00:00 EST 2014

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    Posted Thu May 15 00:00:00 EDT 2014

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