Winner of the Ron Gabriel Award of the Society for American Baseball Research "Heartfelt and entertaining. Cook's narrative is splendid, but the subtext of his book is even better." -- The Wall Street Journal "A wonderful book by someone who clearly loves the game and the seemingly small moments that cement that love. Bravo!"-- Ken Burns "A poignant study that goes beyond baseball."-- The New York Times "The 1947 World Series had everything: Joe DiMaggio and Jackie Robinson, Yankee Stadium and Ebbets Field. It went a full and fully dramatic seven games, with enduring legends in both dugouts. And yet, as so often happens in baseball, bit players jumped from the agate type into the headlines as well. Kevin Cook offers a fine appreciation of the games, the subplots, and the personalities that made '47 a true Fall Classic.
"-- Bob Costas "A magnificent, Hall of Fame caliber addition to baseball literature."-- George F. Will "[An] essential summer read. a fascinating deep dive into the unlikely characters that made the 1947 World Series between the Yankees and Dodgers a classic"-- New York Post "Entertaining, well-researched history. In profiling the lives of these six overlooked men, Cook reveals the complicated reality of baseball's golden era."-- Publishers Weekly (starred review) "An impressively reported, smoothly written book"-- Kirkus Reviews "[An] entertaining slice of baseball history."-- Booklist "An outstanding collection of stories about men, about life and about one glorious World Series, it is one that all baseball readers should add to their libraries."-- SportsBookGuy.
com " Electric October is a great baseball story and a classic American tale, as the six hard-working men at the heart of the narrative seized the moment when fate called. Kevin Cook has crafted one of the best books you'll read this year."-- James Bradley , author of Flags of Our Fathers and The China Mirage "The pleasures of Electric October are many: from the spectacle of a Babe Ruth popup to the insights of the boy-manager Bucky Harris; from the origin of the relief specialist to the inception of a signature radio call; from a famous running catch to a terrifying prank among teammates. You'll also learn how it feels to be fired - because Kevin Cook reveals that disappointment, and what skilled men do with it, has defined baseball across its many years."-- Nicholas Dawidoff , author of The Catcher Was a Spy and The Crowd Sounds Happy "The lives on the margins always have been far more interesting to me than the ones at the top of the sports page. That's what makes Electric October such a wonder. Six character actors named Snuffy and Cookie, Burt and Al, and Bill and Bucky have their leading-man moments during the implausible events of the 1947 World Series. There is magic here and we all get to share in it.
Terrific." -- Leigh Montville , author of The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth and Sting Like a Bee: Muhammad Ali vs. the United States of America, 1966-1971.