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New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez debuts his new children’s book Out
of the Ballpark. But, why now? read more... |
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THE LATIN FORUM
BOOKS
THE HUMAN TOUCH
By Victor Cruz-Lugo
New York Yankee third baseman Alex Rodriguez promotes
his children’s book while riding out waves of preseason controversy.
There are presently few professional baseball players who
can spark controversy as effortlessly as the 31-year-old, Dominican-American
New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez, affectionately known as A-Rod. With
a 10-year $252-million contract, poor performances and playing in
arguably the most aggressively critical sports town, in the nation,
A-Rod has become a lightning rod for complaints.
Following lackluster postseason batting stats in 2004 and 2006—wherein
the Detroit Tigers made swift work of the Yanks in four games—high
profile jabs by Chicago White Sox manager Ozzie Guillén and
fellow Yankee Jason Giambi, sloppy fielding, as well as rumors the
living legend would leave the Yanks on a contractual technicality,
Rodriguez was left sailing through a perfect storm of preseason
controversy while in the middle of a book tour.
And so an event as apparently benign as a book signing for the second
children’s tale Rodriguez has penned—Out of the Ballpark
($16.99, HarperCollins)—can take on vaguely menacing characteristics.
When Hispanic Magazine caught up with the living legend at Books&Books,
the prominent Miami indie book shop, the place was buzzed with subdued
chatter about a previous signing event wherein the Yankee slugger
had a baseball thrown at (and not to) him. But at the Miami signing,
A-Rod, in black T-shirt and jeans, sitting before and signing a
mountain of copies of Out of the Ballpark, looked as diligent and
determined as the boy protagonist depicted in his book.
His representative Steve Fortunato gamely responded to a quip about
how the caramel-colored, green-eyed slugger looked bigger in person
than in real life, by responding, “that’s because Alex
has been hitting the weights.” Meanwhile, A-Rod’s adoring
fans, nonplussed by the negative side of the hype, formed a growing
line that ran outside the store and nearly the length of the block
waiting to purchase a signed copy of Out of the Ballpark.
The 30-page book, intended for 4- to 8-year-olds, is illustrated
by artist Frank Morrison, and includes a special edition Topps baseball
card featuring Rodriguez as a kid, as well as a three-page photo
album of A-Rod’s sports-frenzied childhood. The thin, square
tome tells the tale of a boy A-Rod who drops a ball during the “playoffs,”
then obsessively practices and gets the clutch hit at an even more
important championship game. Hmm. The tome finds its limitations
in its, perhaps unavoidable, inclusion of baseball jargon not every
kid is going to get without some explaining. Its strength lies in
the illustrations, which are first-rate.
“One reason I do this is because it’s a way of promoting
literacy,” explains
Rodriguez, looking up momentarily from his swift work signing books.
“It’s also a way of encouraging parents to sit down
with their children and get close to them by reading to them,”
he adds.
Rodriguez—who skipped college to become in 1994, at 18, the
youngest player to start a professional game in 16 years—is
today an avid reader. He can quote you a lengthy list of favorite
recent titles and like his weight training, his reading is results-driven
with a heavy emphasis on books about success.
Among other dazzling stats, Rodriguez was twice voted Most Valuable
Player in his league, and is the only person in baseball history
to hit 400 home runs before turning 30. It took a postseason slump,
and lots of bad press, to almost make him one of us, the mortal
and the flawed. That said, baseball is—perhaps mercifully
so—a long-term game of averages. It is not therefore too much
to hope, or even to expect, that Rodriguez will be back with better
postseason stats and even a newer, improved children’s book
before long.
To reiterate the plotline of Out of the Ballpark’s narrative:
A child A-Rod chokes during a big game, regroups, gets back to the
fundamentals, then hits it out the park.
“That’s how you define baseball. It’s a sport
that can bring anyone to their knees,” says Rodriguez. “For
me, while this past year was the toughest in my career, it was also,
in some way, the most rewarding. For many people I did become a
lot more human ... and [they] realized that I’d been just
as down as anyone else, but I think that going through adversity,
once you get through it, gives you a boost of confidence not just
as a ballplayer, but also as a man.”
One look at the line of loyal fans eagerly awaiting a signed book
shows there’s no shortage of faith in Rodriguez despite the
precipitous ups and downs of professional sports.
Bookshelf
What’s A-Rod—who prefers to peruse several
books at once—reading?
The Prince of the City:
Giuliani, New York and the Genius of American Life
By Fred Siegel
Encounter Books
The Winner Within
By Pat Riley
Putnam Adult
Jack: Straight from the
Gut
By Jack Welch
Warner Business Books
Gustavo Cisneros: The Pioneer
By Pablo Bachelet
Planeta
From Good to Great:
Why Some Companies Make the Leap ... and Others Don’t
By Jim Collins
Harper Business
The Art of Seduction
& The 48 Laws of Power
Both by author Robert Greene
Profile Books
Plus he reads anything by investment billionaire Warren
Buffett.
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