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Bart Giamatti: A Profile | 
enlarge | Author: Robert P. Moncreiff Publisher: Yale University Press Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $6.60 You Save: $28.40 (81%)
New (20) Used (9) from $6.07
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 1079624
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.2 x 0.9
ISBN: 0300121873 Dewey Decimal Number: 378.111 EAN: 9780300121872 ASIN: 0300121873
Publication Date: April 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW HARDBACK BOOK AND DUST COVER IN EXCELLENT CONDITION, PROMPT NEXT DAY SHIPPING IN PADDED ENVELOPES
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
This vivid portrait of Bart Giamatti encompasses his entire eventful life but focuses especially on his years at Yale University (1966–1986) and his brief career as a major league baseball executive (1986–1989). As scholar, teacher, and then university president, Giamatti was an admired and respected figure on campus. He forged his academic career during turbulent decades, and his tenure in baseball was no less contentious, for as commissioner of baseball he oversaw the banishment of Cincinnati’s Pete Rose from the game for gambling. The book draws on Giamatti’s numerous writings and speeches to illuminate the character and complexities of the man and to understand the values that motivated his leadership. Bart Giamatti was a cultural conservative and institutional moderate at a time when such values were out of favor and under attack. At Yale, as a baseball executive, and indeed in all things, Giamatti championed the related values of freedom and order. Robert P. Moncreiff places Giamatti in the context of major events at Yale, recounts in detail the legal context in which the Pete Rose affair unfolded, and arrives at a nuanced understanding of this memorable man’s life.
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| Customer Reviews:
Not an objective description of an exceptional person May 2, 2008 Having known and worked with Bart Giammati when he was a professor and later president of Yale University, I find this biography incomplete and subjective. It is not clear to me what the author's objective was in writing this book, but his research was at best incomplete, at worst: Biased. There is no indication in the list of people that he interviewed for the book that he met with anyone who actually worked 24/7 during the "revolutionary days" of the sixties and seventies to keep the University going and one glaring omission is any mention of the attempt to blow up the Ingalls Hockey Rink during a meeting! Bart Giammati, like most of us, was not perfect, but he was one of the finest human beings I have been privileged to know and he deserves better than this book. Peter H. Tveskov Branford, Connecticut
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