The Truth Hurts, by Jimmy Piersall.
This book starts off where
Fear Strikes Out leaves off, meaning that it starts in the middle. It also ends in the middle; Piersall recounts getting fired from the White Sox but still managing to hold on to a radio gig, and promises a third edition (which never came). In any case, this should be on your shelf of baseball books (or books about people with no filter).
When I first got this the the other day, I just sort of flipped through it, and I wasn't impressed by the overly casual style. It seemed really sloppy. But when I went back and started at the beginning, Piersall's unschooled style grew on me. The stories are, simply put, hilarious; many are also reveal much about players (like Ted Williams and Billy Martin), managers (Lou Boudreau, Joe Cronin, Tony LaRussa), owners (Veeck, Finley, Reinsdorf), and those in the broadcasting business (Harry Caray, WMAQ's station manager). It's interesting to see some of these Type A personalities clash.
Piersall might not come across as authentic to contemporary audiences, though, since he is not worried about politeness or false humility. He does not so much brag as he celebrates his own accomplishments, and I see nothing wrong with that.
He appears to be generally honest, but we get everything through his lens, and while he makes a point to say that some of his adversaries, though they were wrong in whatever Piersall-related dust-up we hear about, were otherwise good people, he comes off a little like the always-innocent AJ Pierzynski. Yet I like that about this book; Piersall did not have some editor swoop in to make him appear family friendly (though local writer Dick Whittingham helped out on this book). The guy was edgy, and we get to see that. He's not guarded about his impulsivity whatsoever, and that's refreshing, in a way. He was just over 50 when he penned this book, but he had not mellowed at all; for example, he
attacks LaRussa, Einhorn, and Reinsdorf so much so that it gets uncomfortable. But, like I said, I'm glad that no editor came and softened these attacks. Whether Piersall was right or wrong, he comes across as real.
If there's a problem with the book, he draws on other people to defend him too much. It does not reflect well on him and sometimes makes this book less of an unfiltered take and more of an apologia.
Fun book, though, and a quick read. Here's a guy who played with Ted Williams and against the Stengel Yankees, whose fielding prowess Tris Speaker commented upon, and who called games in which Harold Baines played. That's a lot of baseball. The Sox were lucky to have a national figure providing color on their games.
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rogers park bryan wrote:
This registered sex offender I regularly converse with on the internet just said something really stupid