
War Fever
Boston, Baseball, and America in the Shadow of the Great War
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Narrated by:
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Craig A. Hart
About this listen
A "marvelous" (Sports Illustrated) portrait of the three men whose lives were forever changed by WWI-era Boston and the Spanish flu: baseball star Babe Ruth, symphony conductor Karl Muck, and Harvard law student Charles Whittlesey.
In the fall of 1918, a fever gripped Boston. The streets emptied as paranoia about the deadly Spanish flu spread. Newspapermen and vigilante investigators aggressively sought to discredit anyone who looked or sounded German. And as the war raged on, the enemy seemed to be lurking everywhere: prowling in submarines off the coast of Cape Cod, arriving on passenger ships in the harbor, or disguised as the radicals lecturing workers about the injustice of a 60-hour workweek.
War Fever explores this delirious moment in American history through the stories of three men: Karl Muck, the German conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, accused of being an enemy spy; Charles Whittlesey, a Harvard law graduate who became an unlikely hero in Europe; and the most famous baseball player of all time, Babe Ruth, poised to revolutionize the game he loved. Together, they offer a gripping narrative of America at war and American culture in upheaval.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
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Critic reviews
"War Fever brilliantly weaves together the lives of three celebrities to tell the story of how the First World War reshaped America. Richly detailed and a pleasure to read." (Michael S. Neiberg, author of The Path to War: How the First World War Created Modern America)
"An entertaining reminder that American hero worship, media hype, and fierce nationalism haven't changed much in a century." (Kirkus)
"Carefully researched, full of dramatic moments and keen insights, and written with panache, War Fever is at once an impressive act of historical recovery and a ripping good tale. Weaving together the stories of the nation's greatest military hero, one of its most dastardly villains, and its most celebrated professional athlete, Randy Roberts and Johnny Smith vividly reconstruct the historical forces that reshaped Boston and reconfigured American life during World War I." (Bruce J. Schulman, Boston University)
What listeners say about War Fever
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- John Cashman
- 05-19-20
Very nice
Very nice book. Rather than looking at baseball, the 1918 pandemic, and WWI separately, as other books have, it puts them all together in historical context. It provides a very rich depiction of those events in a unique way.
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- Anthony Sasser
- 07-02-21
I wanted to like this book...
It's got all the makings of a great book. However they dwell on uninteresting characters and tend to ramble about things not associated with baseball, the war or the fever. Only an ok read.
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- MrWarigami
- 04-26-22
Almost entertaining, but the history has a glaring flaw.
Firstly the narrator is almost unlistenable. It’s taken me a month to get through a day book. The man sounds like a computerized voice reading the text.
For a book called “War Fever,” the epidemic seems to be something of a minor note alluded to for the sake of comparison, by the reader, to COVID 19.
The biggest issue is that this historian quotes works by Al Stump, about Ty Cobb, that have been so thoroughly discredited it shouldn’t have made it to publishing with them cited. Is this a small detail? Yes. It is bad history? Absolutely. It makes the rest of the work suspect for me. Ken Burns can be forgiven, he quoted the works when they were still considered factual. However, since then Stump has been discredited so well that you have to wonder about a professor of history willing to quote him to describe Ty Cobb still.
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