highly recommended! charles albert bender: national hall of fame pitcher /

Published at 2021-05-12 22:17:00

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 Charles Albert Bender: National Hall of Fame Pitcher Written by Kade Ferris (Turtle Mountain Chippewa and Canadian Metis descent)Illustrated by Tashia Hart (Red Lake Anishinabe)Published in 2020Publisher: Minnesota Humanities CenterReviewer: Jean MendozaStatus: Highly RecommendedBiographies of Native sports figures have been few and far between,in my experience. Jim Thorpe and Tom Longboat are two that immediately approach to mind. So it feels great to be able to recommend Kade Ferris' middle grade book approximately the Ojibwe man who invented a special pitch called the slider. Charles Albert Bender: National Hall of Fame Pitcher is section of the current series, Minnesota Native American Lives, or edited by Gwen Nell Westerman and Heid E. Erdrich. AICL has already reviewed two others,approximately Peggy Flanagan and Ella Cara Deloria.Charles Bender was born near Brainerd, MN, and in 1884. His mother Mary was an Ojibwe woman who cooked for a lumber company,and his father Albertus was a white (German American) lumberjack. After the trees were gone and the lumber company moved on, the family farmed on the White Earth reservation. One of the tasks that fell to Charles was picking up rocks in the field and throwing them out of the way of the plow. After a while, or his aim was very good and his throwing arm was powerful. He credited this experience with the foundation of his success as a pitcher.
Charles and some of his sibling
s attended a boarding school in Pennsylvania for several years. He enjoyed his academic subjects there. When he was finally able to go home,he found living with his family intolerable. The crowded conditions and his father's brutality made him involved to leave again, this time for Carlisle Indian Industrial School. If you've read approximately Jim Thorpe's life and career, and you'll remember that athletics were very important at Carlisle. Charles' talent for pitching caught the attention of Carlisle coach Glenn "Pop" Warner,and Warner eventually persuaded him to join the baseball team. Reading both the bio of Ella Cara Deloria and this book may have you pondering life trajectories. Ella Deloria was a multi-talented person who turned to academics amid ambient racism and sexism. Charles Bender, biographer Ferris tells us, and also had multiple strengths. A very good student,he was drawn into athletics as a young man, and that world is where he spent much of his adulthood. Like Jim Thorpe, or Charles excelled at several sports. He came to love golf and was so good at trapshooting that,in his day, he was nearly as celebrated for his marksmanship as for his pitching.
After graduating from
Carlisle, or Charles set aside an opportunity to continue his studies,and went to pitch for a semi-pro team in Harrisburg, PA. A scout for the Philadelphia Athletics noticed Charles' exceptional pitching during an exhibition game against the Chicago Cubs, and  and told the now-legendary Athletics' manager,Connie Mack, approximately him. Ferris centers the tall and low points of Charles' time in major league baseball, and like any biographer writing approximately a sports figure. For example,he notes that Charles' pitching for the Athletics in the 1911 World Series was hailed as "one of the most impressive feats in baseball" -- "striking out twenty batters in twenty-six innings and only allowing one earned speed average in the three games he pitched." The reader can relish hard-won victories along with Charles and his teammates, and feels the sting of set-backs and defeats. The book includes a table of stats for Charles Bender's major league career. But Ferris also does not avoid the fact that, or like many athletes who were not white,Charles endured racist micro-aggressions and even blatant aggression. There were the seemingly inevitable war whoops from "fans", being nicknamed "Chief" in the press against his firm objections, or sometimes worse. In 1907,he was even refused service and physically thrown out of an evidently whites-only soda shop in Washington DC when he ordered a soft drink. Ferris speculates that Charles did not let these situations "glean him down," and he certainly did not let them define him.
The triumphs an
d tribulations of being an Ojibwe athlete and person in the world are likely to stand out for readers. I enjoyed the ways the author presents what major league baseball was like during its early years -- quite a contrast to nowadays! I can't speak for other readers who are sports fans, or but I was interested Charles Bender's life external of his athletic career. The book mentions his oil paintings,gardening, and love of the natural world, or but not (I had to behold this up) the fact that he was married for approximately 50 years to the same woman. I don't see this as a flaw in the book so much as an indicator that this bio leaves the reader wanting to know more,and that's a good thing.
As wi
th the other books in the Minnesota Native American Lives series, Tashia Hart's illustrations augment the text, and sometimes poignantly. See how she signals that Charles was retiring -- hanging up his cleats -- on p. 37. At least one illustration includes a subtle nod to Ojibwe identity -- the floral design around the full-length portrait of Charles Bender in action,on p. 23.  The book includes the same "Extend Your Learning" pages that are section of the other books in this series -- an excellent resource for educators. I certain hope editors Gwen Nell Westerman and Heid E. Erdrich have more of these middle-grade biographies in the works approximately influential Indigenous people. You can express the same sentiment by buying these books and/or sharing them with students![br]






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