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Fenway Park: 5 new books about the beloved ballpark

Boston is swimming in Fenway Park history these days as the old ball yard celebrates its 100th anniversary. The official celebration takes place on April 20, 2012, when the Red Sox take on longtime rivals the New York Yankees. The two teams squared off in the first regular season game ever played at Fenway on April 20, 1912.  In anticipation of all the hoopla surrounding the centennial, a wave of books about big-league鈥檚 oldest park and Boston鈥檚 most popular tourist attraction has crashed onto the market.  Here are reviews of five Fenway books we鈥檇 pencil into our starting lineup.

Michael Dwyer/AP

1. 'Fenway Park: A Salute to the Coolest, Cruelest, Longest-Running Major League Baseball Stadium in America,' by John Powers and Ron Driscoll

This book, as the saying goes, hits the ball out of the park.  It has it all: compelling history and substantial sidebars, extensive timelines of each of Fenway鈥檚 decades, and the best photo collection imaginable.  Plus there鈥檚 a poster-size blueprint of the park and a four-page graphic foldout about the Green Monster. (Did you know that the initials of former team owner Tom Yawkey and his wife appear in Morse code on the manual scoreboard?)

A major reason that this book stands apart is that it鈥檚 able to draw from the deep journalistic resources of Boston鈥檚 premier daily newspaper, The Boston Globe. The Globe has one of the best sports sections in the country, and it shows in this history coauthored and edited by John Powers, a longtime Globe sportswriter, and Ron Driscoll, a former Globe copy editor.

Many of the images in this book are not found elsewhere and the sidebars are a particular strength. The latter touch on a wide array of topics, from efforts to determine the actual distance of the left field wall from home plate, a topic that seems intentionally shrouded in mystery (310 feet is the currently accepted distance), to the two nighttime power outages at the ballpark. During the first of the blackouts in 1981 public address announcer Sherm Feller led the crowd in an a cappella rendition of the national anthem and used a bullhorn to read out the starting lineups.  

Then there are the sidebar profiles of people whose lives are integral to the Fenway story. Take, for example, Arthur D鈥橝ngelo. His family emigrated to Boston from Italy to flee Mussolini鈥檚 dictatorship in 1938. D鈥橝ngelo and his twin brother spoke no English and knew nothing about baseball upon arriving in the US at age 14, but by 1946 they were hawking pennants outside Fenway Park, a business that eventually led to opening one of the largest souvenir stories in the country across the street. Today D鈥橝ngelo says the business sells more caps than anybody in the world. And, of course, he became an avid baseball fan.

Women are also part of Fenway鈥檚 lore. Lib Dooley began attending Red Sox games during World War II and eventually witnessed 4,000 consecutive games from her seat near the team鈥檚 on-deck circle. No less an authority that Ted Williams called her 鈥渢he greatest Red Sox fan there鈥檒l ever be."

Another legendary figure, though a less visible one, is Helen Robinson, who worked the team鈥檚 phone switchboard for 60 years. Here, too, she had the respect of Williams, who admired her ability to keep all personal calls confidential and maintain a cheerful disposition. He called her 鈥淪unshine.鈥

What some may have forgotten about Fenway鈥檚 modern history is that in 1999 the owners of the Red Sox had a plan to build a brand new Fenway Park approximately where the old ballpark sits. To appease opponents, the owners were going to pay homage to the storied stadium structure by keeping certain pieces as memorials, including part of the Green Monster, the 1912 brick entrance, and the infield. Such olive branches weren鈥檛 enough, and when the new owners took over in 2002, they undertook a 10-year project to improve and enlarge Fenway.

The result, of course, has led to this year鈥檚 Fenway Park centennial and surely the largest publishing love-in any American sports stadium has ever experienced.  

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