1933. America was still reeling from the crash. Breadlines stretched around city blocks, and shantytowns sprawled in the shadows of skyscrapers. American optimism was fading—and baseball was in trouble, too. Owners slashed budgets, fans stayed home, and even the mighty Babe Ruth seemed to have lost some of his magic. The election of Franklin D. Roosevelt offered hope, but just days before his inauguration, five shots rang out—missing the president-elect, killing the mayor of Chicago, and setting in motion a chain of events that would eventually bring together the world’s best ballplayers for the first All-Star Game.
It was a newspaperman’s idea: The Game of the Century. Put the world’s best players on one field and let the public decide who belonged there. At a moment when some feared the national pastime would not survive the decade, Chicago would host the ballgame as the highlight of the 1933 World’s Fair. The city hoped to shed its reputation as a haven for gamblers and gangsters and help restore America’s standing on the world stage. But abroad, dark clouds were gathering. Hitler was Germany’s new chancellor, and Mussolini had consolidated his power. As visitors strolled the fairgrounds, Italian warplanes flew overhead, and a zeppelin sent by the German delegation circled the city emblazoned with a swastika.
The First All-Star Game is the story of a nation and a sport at a crossroads, and a sweeping look back at baseball’s early history and the America that shaped it. Deeply researched and filled with remarkable characters—legendary players like Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Lefty Grove rubbing shoulders with Bonnie and Clyde, Al Capone, and Charles Lindbergh—Randall Sullivan explores the history of an American obsession and captures the moment when both the sport and the nation found renewal in a single spectacle of hope.
Praise for Randall Sullivan:
“A master class in the difficult art of first-person, narrative nonfiction.”—Clancy Martin, New York Times Book Review, on The Devil’s Best Trick
“A tour-de-force . . . Sullivan’s reportage is extraordinary, his narrative enthralling.”—Rolling Stone on The Price of Experience
“Sullivan has done what every aspiring true-crime writer hopes to do: He has crossed the line from titillation into cultural history.”—Los Angeles Times on The Price of Experience
“A huge, mesmerizing book.”—The New Yorker on The Price of Experience
“The pages seem to turn themselves.”—The Boston Globe on The Price of Experience
“Intensive, engaging investigative journalism.”—Library Journal on Dead Wrong