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词条 You Know Me Al
释义

  1. Summary

  2. Background

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Infobox book
| name = You Know Me Al: a busher's letters
| image = You Know Me Al.jpg
| caption =
| author = Ring Lardner
| title_orig =
| orig_lang_code =
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| translator =
| illustrator =
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| country =
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| series =
| subject = Baseball
| genre = Epistolary novel, humor
| published = 1916
| media_type = Book
| pages = 218
| awards =
| isbn = 9780684136684
| isbn_note = (1960 edition)
| oclc = 288671
| dewey =
| congress =
| preceded_by =
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| wikisource =
}}

You Know Me Al is a book by Ring Lardner,[1] and subsequently a nationally syndicated comic strip scripted by Lardner and drawn by Will B. Johnstone and Dick Dorgan.[2] The book consists of stories that were written as letters from a professional baseball player, Jack Keefe, to his friend Al Blanchard in their hometown of Bedford, Indiana.

Summary

Jack Keefe is a headstrong, gullible, cheap, naive, self-centred, egotistical and uneducated rube—but he has a strong pitching arm. He begins the book as a minor leaguer in Terre Haute, Indiana who gets accepted by the big leagues to pitch for the Chicago White Sox, circa 1914. In his barely literate letters home to his friend Al, he details his first experiences in the big leagues, which ends in disaster as he pitches poorly and gets sent back down to the minors again. Later, he is accepted again by the majors where he gains some success as a pitcher, but is taken advantage of by nearly everyone he meets.

Much of the humour of the book is from Jack's boastful, oblivious nature, and his utter inability to recognize when he is being manipulated or cheated. In one of the book's many examples of this, White Sox owner Charles Comiskey repeatedly dupes Keefe during contract negotiations, but still convinces Keefe he's getting a good deal. Other characters also routinely manipulate Keefe into doing what they want—amongst the major characters, only Al, who is always offstage, seems to be completely aboveboard and loyal to Jack. (Coach Kid Gleason also seems to be honourable to Jack, though he is not above deceiving Jack when it's ultimately for Jack's own good.)

Almost all the baseball characters with whom Jack interacts, be they team owners, managers, or players, were real-life people. Well-known baseball figures who appear in the novel include Comiskey, Gleason (who constantly teases Jack about his weight and lack of baseball smarts), opposing players Christy Mathewson and Ty Cobb, and many of Jack's White Sox teammates. The only major completely fictional baseball character is the left-handed pitcher Allen. Allen is a teammate who Jack doesn't especially like. Allen eventually introduces Jack to his sister-in-law Florence ("Florrie").

After brief, semi-disastrous engagements to two other women (Hazel and Violet), Jack eventually marries Florrie. Florence enjoys living in style on Jack's salary in Chicago, and refuses to move back to Bedford during the off season, which causes tension between the two. For a while, to save money, Allen and his wife move in with Jack and Florrie, which makes things even worse. Jack and Florrie separate for a while, but eventually reconcile months later, and soon after have a child named Allen, who Jack calls Little Al; Florrie assumes the child is named for her brother-in-law, but Jack writes that he is really named after his old friend Al in Bedford. Jack and Florrie's marriage continues to be tense even after Little Al's birth. Jack seems oblivious that his parentage of Little Al is potentially ambiguous.

Jack actually does fairly well as a major league pitcher; at one point his record is 10-6. (Typically, Jack assumes full credit for the ten wins, but blames his teammates for the six losses.) However, Jack's gullibility and almost complete self-absorption lead him in and out of a number of scrapes and comical situations throughout the six linked stories in the novel. The book ends with Jack and his teammates about to embark on a trip to Japan for a baseball exhibition.

Background

Lardner was a sportswriter who relocated to Chicago in 1907, where he covered the Cubs and White Sox baseball teams for several city newspapers, most notably the Chicago Tribune.[3] He used his experiences as a baseball writer for his first published piece of fiction, "A Busher's Letters Home", for the Saturday Evening Post in 1914. According to the introduction of the book Ring Around the Bases: the Complete Baseball Stories of Ring Lardner, edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli, the Post published nine of Lardner's baseball stories during 1914, six of which comprised You Know Me Al, published by George H. Doran Company in 1916.[4]

According to Bruccoli, "Despite the magazine exposure of Lardner's magazine stories – the Saturday Evening Post had a weekly circulation of 2,000,000 copies when he wrote for it – he did not reach a large book readership. You Know Me Al required just one printing in 1916 and was not reprinted until 1925 as part of the Scribners program of launching Lardner as a serious writer."[4]

Lardner published a total of 26 "busher" stories, featuring Keefe's fictional letters to Al, between 1914 and 1919 in the Post.

  1. A Busher's Letters Home (7 March 1914)
  2. The Busher Comes Back (23 May 1914)
  3. The Busher's Honeymoon (11 July 1914)
  4. A New Busher Breaks In (12 September 1914)
  5. The Busher's Kid (3 October 1914)
  6. The Busher Beats It Hence (7 November 1914)
  7. The Busher Abroad: Part 1 of 4 (20 March 1915)
  8. The Busher Abroad: Part 2 of 4 (10 April 1915)
  9. The Busher Abroad: Part 3 of 4 (8 May 1915)
  10. The Busher Abroad: Part 4 of 4 (15 May 1915)
  11. The Busher's Welcome Home (5 June 1915)
  12. Call for Mr. Keefe (9 March 1918)
  13. Jack the Kaiser Killer (23 March 1918)
  14. Corporal Punishment (13 April 1918)
  15. Purls before Swine (8 June 1918)
  16. And Many a Stormy Wind Shall Blow (6 July 1918)
  17. Private Valentine (3 August 1918)
  18. Strategy and Tragedy (31 August 1918)
  19. Decorated (26 October 1918)
  20. Sammy Boy (21 December 1918)
  21. Simple Simon (25 January 1919)
  22. The Busher Reenlists (19 April 1919)
  23. The Battle of Texas (24 May 1919)
  24. Along Came Ruth (26 July 1919)
  25. The Courtship of T. Dorgan (6 September 1919)
  26. The Busher Pulls a Mays (18 October 1919)

The first six of these stories were collected as You Know Me Al in 1916. Stories 13 through 15 were collected as Treat 'Em Rough (1918), and 16 through 21 were collected as The Real Dope (1919). The other stories were not republished during Lardner's lifetime, and several (7 through 11) have never been republished at all.

According to Bruccoli, "the Post and its readers wanted all the Busher stories that Lardner could deliver. More than he wanted to write, for he tired of the character and the requirements of the epistolary form ... After he stopped writing about Keefe, Lardner reluctantly provided continuity for a syndicated You Know Me Al comic strip from 1922 to 1925,"[4] distributed by the Bell Syndicate, for which Lardner was also working as a writer.[5]

Lardner scripted continuity for over 700 of the syndicated You Know Me Al strips, but, as with his "Busher" stories, he soon grew tired of it, and quit writing continuity in January 1925. According to Richard Layman's introduction to the Harvest collection of strips, Lardner continued to receive credit on the strip until September 1925, "but it is clear he worked ahead very little and after the first of February the ideas are someone else's."[5]

References

1. ^{{cite journal|last=Rogers|first=Michael|title=Book Reviews: Classic Returns|journal=Library Journal|date=15 September 1995|volume=120|issue=15|page=58}}
2. ^{{cite journal|last=Schweid|first=Barry|title=Ring Lardner's You Know Me Al (Book REview)|journal=Library Journal|date=15 May 1979|volume=104|issue=10|page=1133}}
3. ^{{cite journal|last=Goetsch|first=Douglas|title=Baseball's Loss of Innocence: When the 1919 Black Sox Scandal shattered Ring Lardner's reverence for the game, the great sportswriter took a permanent walk.|journal=American Scholar|date=Spring 2011|volume=80|issue=2|pages=82–95}}
4. ^Lardner, Ring, edited by Matthew J. Bruccoli. Ring Around The Bases: The Complete Baseball Stories of Ring Lardner, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1992. {{ISBN|0-684-19374-4}}.
5. ^Lardner, Ring. Ring Lardner's You Know Me Al: The Comic Strip Adventures of Jack Keefe. New York: Harvest, 1979. {{ISBN|0-15-676696-5}}.

External links

{{wikisource|You Know Me Al: A Busher's Letters}}
  • [https://archive.org/details/youknowmealbushe00larduoft You Know Me Al on the Internet Archive]
  • {{librivox book | title=You Know Me Al | author=Ring LARDNER}}

4 : 1916 American novels|American sports novels|Baseball novels|Short stories by Ring Lardner

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