- Roger Kahn
Infobox writer
name = Roger Kahn
caption =
birthname = Roger Kahn
birthdate = Birth date and age|1927|10|31
birthplace =Brooklyn, New York ,United States
nationality = American
occupation =Novelist
notableworks = "The Boys of Summer"
influences =
website = http://www.rogerkahn.comRoger Kahn (born
October 31 ,1927 inBrooklyn, New York ) is one of America's leadingwriters aboutsport - especiallybaseball .His classic 1972 memoir, "The Boys of Summer", examines his relationship with his father seen through the prism of their shared affection for the
Brooklyn Dodgers , a team Kahn covered as a young reporter for the "New York Herald Tribune ". The first part of the book consists of recollections of Kahn's two seasons (1952-53) as a Dodger beat writer, coinciding with the peak of theJackie Robinson era in Brooklyn, when Robinson - by then established as a major star and a leader of the Dodgers - still had to confront racism on and off the field.Kahn's father, Gordon Kahn, a radio-program producer, died shortly after the Dodgers lost the
1953 World Series to the hated Yankees. Roger Kahn skillfully conveys how the loss of his father serves as a kind of metaphor for the end of youth and his entry into a more cynical adulthood. Despite the cynicism around him, including the move of the Dodgers toLos Angeles after the 1957 season, Kahn never lost his affection for the Dodger players he knew, nor they for him.The second part of the book consists of his accounts of meetings with thirteen of that period's Dodgers between 1968 and 1971: Robinson,
Roy Campanella ,Duke Snider ,Pee Wee Reese ,Gil Hodges ,Billy Cox ,Carl Furillo ,Preacher Roe ,Carl Erskine ,Joe Black ,Clem Labine ,Andy Pafko , andGeorge Shuba .Kahn earlier worked as a general-assignment magazine writer and also excelled in writing about non-sporting topics. In the first piece of his 1973 collection "How the Weather Was", Kahn wrote candidly about some sour moments in his career, including an editor who reacted to Kahn's sportswriting by remarking "Writing about niggers again, Kahn?"
Kahn's writing on baseball ranks among the best of his time, or, some say, any time.Fact|date=December 2007 In addition to "The Boys of Summer," Kahn wrote books such as "Good Enough to Dream", a chronicle of his year as the owner of a
minor league baseball franchise; "The Era 1947-57", an examination of the decade during which the three New York clubs - the Dodgers, Yankees and Giants - dominatedMajor League Baseball ; and "Memories of Summer", a look back at his youth and early career, plus extended pieces on New York baseball legendsWillie Mays andMickey Mantle . His acclaimed biography of the great heavyweight boxing championJack Dempsey , "A Flame of Pure Fire", is under development as a major motion picture. Five of his articles won the esteemed E. P. Dutton Award for best magazine sports story of the year. No one else has since equaled that stream of triumphs.Kahn's latest book, "Into My Own", (publication June 2006) is a memoir describing friendships with
Robert Frost ,Jackie Robinson .Pee Wee Reese ,Eugene McCarthy , and his late son, Roger Laurence Kahn, who suffered frombipolar disorder , and heroin addiction, and whodied by his own hand from carbon monoxide poisoning in 1987.Kahn writes with touching candor about his own and his family's experiences withMichael DeSisto and theDeSisto School and how that negatively impacted his son Roger's life. That chapter, wroteAndrew Ervin in "The Washington Post ", "will send you scurrying for theKleenex box. Kahn is not only a great baseball writer but also something rarer: a great writer whose subject happens to be baseball."Kahn's
journalism mentors includedStanley Woodward ,John Lardner (the son ofsportswriter /short story masterRing Lardner ) and Red Smith. "Native to those people," Kahn said in an unpublished 1994 interview, "was the underlying presumption that you were familiar with a body of literature in English -- and if you knew Tolstoy, it didn't hurt, either... Our craft begins, as Red Smith said, with 'a decent respect for the mother tongue.'"Kahn attended a prep school then
Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. [ [http://www.nypost.com/seven/12312006/sports/the_rumble_sports_.htm?page=3 "The Rumble: AN OFF-THE-BALL LOOK AT YOUR FAVORITE SPORTS CELEBRITIES"] , "New York Post ",December 31 ,2006 . AccessedDecember 13 ,2007 . "The five Erasmus Hall of Fame legends include Raiders owner Al Davis, Bears quarterback Sid Luckman, Yankee pitching great Waite Hoyt, Billy Cunningham and Knicks founder Ned Irish. Other sports notables include Bulls/White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf, chess champion Bobby Fischer, ex-Browns head coach Sam Rutigliano, legendary NBA referee Norm Drucker and "Boys of Summer" author Roger Kahn."]Kahn lives in the
Hudson Valley community ofStone Ridge, New York with his wife, Katharine Colt Johnson, a psychotherapist. He was inducted into theNational Jewish Sports Hall of Fame onApril 30 ,2006 . On that occasion,Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig wrote, "Roger is an icon in our sport."Dave Anderson , thePulitzer Prize -winning sports columnist of "The New York Times ", added: "Anyone who has ever read any ofRoger 's vast collection ofwriting knows only too well that he is not merely one of America's greatsportswriters , but one of America's great writers period."References
External links
* [http://www.rogerkahn.com/ Roger Kahn's Official Website]
* [https://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/archives/confirm.htm?StoryID=67236 Excerpt from Article about "The Boys of Summer"]
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