Description
Description
"Hyper-detailed and rollickingly funny, Summer of the Cheap Wieners does well to celebrate the agony and the ecstasy of America's pastime." - Booklist
Meet the 1941 Phillies: A sad little ball club with a fading number of disgruntled fans. They aren't very good now, and they won't be soon. But the Phillies of 1941 certainly are a team--just like all the others, with a uniform and a roster full of players: Cheap ones, angry ones, regretful ones, with nicknames like "Boom-Boom" and "Dangerous Dan." Together, they'll find a way to win about 40 or so baseball games. Also together, they will lose far more.
Their season starts poorly and by May they've traded their last player of any value. Meanwhile, Joe DiMaggio has been drawing boos from bored Yankee fans until he hits a fateful little dribbler that turns into a 56-game hit streak. As the summer goes on, the Phillies try to strangle each other, resent the pity of their opponents, and watch their manager lose his sanity and his job security. For some reason, everyone seems a lot more interested in the DiMaggio thing while meetings are quietly held by league officials to discuss how no one is even buying hot dogs at Phillies games.
The summer of 1941 is the setting of eternal baseball lore including DiMaggio's streak, Ted Williams winning the All-Star Game, and the Brooklyn Dodgers breaking free of their iconic dreadfulness, all as tanks roll across Europe. There's a lot going on in the world, but the Phillies are willing to settle for fewer mean columns being written about them. After all, they have a season to play, too; loss by loss, heartbreak by heartbreak, attempted strangling by attempted strangling.
It was a season that deserved to be forgotten and quickly was. But it taught the Phillies, their fans, and the city of Philadelphia that some players make history; a lot more of them are just playing through it.
Meet the 1941 Phillies: A sad little ball club with a fading number of disgruntled fans. They aren't very good now, and they won't be soon. But the Phillies of 1941 certainly are a team--just like all the others, with a uniform and a roster full of players: Cheap ones, angry ones, regretful ones, with nicknames like "Boom-Boom" and "Dangerous Dan." Together, they'll find a way to win about 40 or so baseball games. Also together, they will lose far more.
Their season starts poorly and by May they've traded their last player of any value. Meanwhile, Joe DiMaggio has been drawing boos from bored Yankee fans until he hits a fateful little dribbler that turns into a 56-game hit streak. As the summer goes on, the Phillies try to strangle each other, resent the pity of their opponents, and watch their manager lose his sanity and his job security. For some reason, everyone seems a lot more interested in the DiMaggio thing while meetings are quietly held by league officials to discuss how no one is even buying hot dogs at Phillies games.
The summer of 1941 is the setting of eternal baseball lore including DiMaggio's streak, Ted Williams winning the All-Star Game, and the Brooklyn Dodgers breaking free of their iconic dreadfulness, all as tanks roll across Europe. There's a lot going on in the world, but the Phillies are willing to settle for fewer mean columns being written about them. After all, they have a season to play, too; loss by loss, heartbreak by heartbreak, attempted strangling by attempted strangling.
It was a season that deserved to be forgotten and quickly was. But it taught the Phillies, their fans, and the city of Philadelphia that some players make history; a lot more of them are just playing through it.
Critical Reviews
Critical Reviews
"Summer of the Cheap Wieners blends exacting detail with lively storytelling and a good bit of humor to shed light on the tribulations of a club that has as much to tell us about the game and its history as Joltin' Joe's better-known exploits. Phillies enthusiasts will be delightfully horrified (and history enthusiasts simply delighted) by Klugh's work."--Megan Rowley, Editor in Chief, FanGraphs
"Justin Klugh is one of my favorite authors. He brings history to life with his vivacious prose then throws an arm around it, hands it a beer, and lets it get to work regaling us with stories. Summer of the Cheap Wieners waxes poetic, at times, but also ribald and humorous. It never wanes, though, as it sidesteps the greatness of the 1941 season to deliver us waist-deep into the muck that was the Phillies season. Let them have their greatness, it's much more fun down here. It always is with Klugh at the helm."--Craig Goldstein, Editor in Chief, Baseball Prospectus
"Hyper-detailed and rollickingly funny, Summer of the Cheap Wieners does well to celebrate the agony and the ecstasy of America's pastime."-- "Booklist"
Publishing Information
Publishing Information
Publisher:
Brookline Books
Pub date:
2026-02-19
Length:
224 pages

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