When
93-year-old Negro Leagues legend Buck O'Neil asked his friend this question,
Kansas City sports columnist Joe Posnanski found he did not have a clear answer.
Posnanski could not help but think about steroids and large egos and so many
negative things that had begun to identify big-money baseball.
But O'Neil
insisted that he look deeper, and Posnanski remembered the warm summer evenings
of his childhood and playing catch with his father until they had to throw the
ball high to see it against the dying light.
"Hang on to your
day," O'Neil said. "If you hang on to your day, you will stay young."
With that, O'Neil led Posnanski on a cross-country
journey to discover the soul of baseball—and a few secrets of life along the
way. O'Neil played baseball during a time when African Americans were not
welcome in the Major Leagues. But he held no bitterness. Instead, he remembered
nights filled with hot jazz and sunny afternoons playing baseball with Satchel
Paige, Josh Gibson, and Turkey Stearnes.
"I lived, man," O'Neil said.
In The Soul of
Baseball,
Posnanski revives the game through the eyes of O'Neil. They traveled from New
York to San Diego, Atlanta to Chicago. They crossed paths with Hall of Famers
like Willie Mays, Roger Clemens, and Monte Irvin. They watched kids play on a
small diamond on the prairies and millionaires play at Major League parks.
O'Neil's stories form the heart of this book—the day he hit for
the cycle and also met his beloved wife, Ora; the time he saved Billy Williams's
career; and how he kept a promise to Hilton Smith to get him into the Hall of
Fame. O'Neil also shared the wisdom and joy of his years—with Buck anything
could lead to a life lesson, even something as simple as a baseball tossed into
the stands or a woman wearing a bright red
dress.
You haven't forgotten.
You just think you
have.
Memory is like baseball.
You might oh-for-four today.
But you'll
get 3 hits tomorrow.
Right? Good days and bad days.
You'll
remember.
Those stories aren't gone.
They're just behind a few
cobwebs.
Buck O'Neil





