cover image Mantle: The Best There Ever Was

Mantle: The Best There Ever Was

Tony Castro. Rowman & Littlefield, $24.95 (272p) ISBN 978-1-5381-2221-1

Journalist Castro (Mickey Mantle: American Prodigal) expertly reveals the flawed yet glorious life of New York Yankee Mickey Mantle (1931–1995), one of baseball’s greatest switch hitters. The shy Oklahoma country boy, raised by a domineering father, joined the Yankees in 1951, replacing an aging Joe DiMaggio. Castro chronicles the psychological wounds of Mantle’s childhood (his grandmother whipped him, and he wet the bed until age 16) and a traumatic molestation by his half-sister, all of which, Castro argues, contributed to his womanizing and his troubled relationship with his wife, Merlyn Johnson. The writer also delves into Mantle’s alcoholism, which led to cirrhosis later in life, and its effects on his family (Merlyn and three of their four sons were also treated for alcoholism). Nevertheless, by 1968—Mantle’s last year before retiring as a Yankee—he had been a 20-time All Star, a seven-time World Series champion, and recipient of three MVP awards: “I may not have been the best goddamned ballplayer of all time, but if I wasn’t, I’d like to see who was,” he once said. Informative and entertaining, Castro’s biography is certain to please Yankee and Mantle fans alike. (Apr.)