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Book reviews: Willie and the All-Stars, by Floyd Cooper

by Moe Zilla

Created on: July 25, 2010

"It was 1942 and nothing came easy, not even a boy's dreams."

Even young Willie's baseball is made out of string and tape, and he lives alone with his grandma in "a tiny one-room apartment on the North Side of Chicago." But on his grandmother's radio, he listens to the baseball games at Wrigley Field, and dreams about someday hitting a home run of his own. Even when he's running to the store, he imagines he's stealing bases!



Unfortunately, in 1942 it takes more than talent for a boy to grow up to be a Major League baseball player. "It's also about the color of his skin," explains an old man in Willie's neighborhood. Later Willie talks to his friend - a white Irish boy who has the same dreams. "Ol' Ezra tells me I ain't never gonna play in the Majors," Willie says.

"You don't know that for sure," his friend replies.

Author-illustrator Floyd Cooper created some wonderful illustrations for this book. There's realistic watercolors, many of which feature a greyish-yellow background, like the special haze of an old photograph. He catches Willie's expressions perfectly, like when he's dreaming wistfully at his window, or holding the radio almost reverently. Even Ol' Ezra comes across as very thoughtful - and eventually he's the one who gives the two young boys tickets to a very special game at Wrigley Field...

An author's note at the back of the book explains the history behind this story. Baseball became segregated in 1888, and for decades all-black teams traveled America's back roads to play exhibition games. During World War II, the Major League owners staged special all-star games against players from what were then called the "Negro Leagues." As the story arrives at its big moment, Cooper writes that their players "seemed a bit hungrier for the victory,"

Willie watches a game - but what inspires him even more is how when it's over, two players from the opposing teams dared to walk to the pitcher's mound, shaking hands in a show of acknowledgement. Then the story ends abruptly, though the book's next page still adds in some extra significance. "Who knows how many dreams were kindled by their determination?" the author writes at the end of the author's note. Though the real happy ending to this story obviously lies in the history of professional sports.

Major League baseball was integrated in 1947....

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