Baseball's First Superstar
The Lost Life Story of Christy Mathewson
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Buy Now for $27.79
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Narrated by:
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James McSorley
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By:
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Alan D. Gaff
About this listen
In his first fourteen seasons, as a pitcher for the Giants, Christy Mathewson never won fewer than twenty games in a season, and he almost single-handedly won the 1905 World Series. In 1918, though age thirty-eight and exempt from military service, he enlisted for World War I, where he exposed himself to nearly lethal amounts of mustard gas as he taught soldiers how to put on gas masks. When he returned home, he was diagnosed with lung problems and tuberculosis, which led to his untimely death at the age of forty-five.
After Mathewson’s death, his eulogies were many, but it was impossible to catch the essence of his life in a single newspaper column. Jane Mathewson, his widow, was determined to provide the reading public with a more intimate portrait of her husband and approached prominent sportswriter Bozeman Bulger, who had known Mathewson for twenty years. Bulger wrote a series of articles titled “The Life Story of Christy Mathewson.” His portraits about the player were amplified by original accounts from Jane, and several unpublished chapters from Mathewson himself, which had been discovered among his papers. These combined accounts allow listeners to hear from Mathewson and those who knew him best.
A superstar long before that term was coined, Mathewson became an icon of sportsmanship. He was posthumously elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame at its first induction ceremony in 1936.
The book is published by University of Nebraska Press. The audiobook is published by University Press Audiobooks.
©2025 Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska (P)2025 Redwood AudiobooksCritic Reviews
“You don’t want to miss this wonderful book.” (Paul Semendinger, author of The Least among Them)
“An essential read for any baseball fan who loves and appreciates the game’s history.” (Mark Braff, author of Sons of Baseball)
“A wonderful tale that should be on every baseball fan’s nightstand.” (Robert Skead, author of The Batboy and the Unbreakable Record)