Beauty at Short is Tom Alesia’s biography of Hall of Fame shortstop Dave Bancroft. What? You’ve never heard of Dave Bancroft? Me neither, until this book came on my radar.
Bancroft was a stellar shortstop who still holds the record for most chances in a season (984). Before his major league career, Bancroft sputtered in the minor leagues in the early years of last century before getting his break with the Philadelphia Phillies in 1915. Bancroft’s major league career as a player and player-manager lasted until 1930, including campaigns with the New York Giants, Boston Braves, and Brooklyn Robins, followed by another stint with the New York Giants as an assistant coach.
Bancroft’s baseball life after his years in the majors was fascinating. He managed minor league teams from 1933 to 1947, and then managed in the women’s professional leagues from 1948 to 1951 when he was sixty years old. He then retired and lived a fairly quiet life in Superior, Wisconsin with his wife Edna who had been at Bancroft’s side throughout his career, and who was arguably more colorful than her husband. Bancroft got the call that he had been voted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1971 at age eighty. Because Bancroft didn’t live long after that, and because his induction was something of a surprise, his signed memorabilia is rare and valuable.
The story behind the story of Beauty at Short is the author’s research. Because Bancroft’s story was a hundred years old and lacked a certain flamboyance, Tom Alesia was working with scant material. I would love to know more about how Alesia dealt with the challenges involved in researching the life of one of the lesser-known Hall of Famers.