Willie Horton

Detroit’s Own Willie the Wonder

By Grant Eldridge and Karen Elizabeth Bush

Paper - 9780814330258 (Out-Of-Print)


Published 2001
Size: 5.5 X 8, Pages: 160

Subjects: Africana Studies: History and Biographies, Regional Studies: Young Readers, Sports

Series: Detroit Biography Series for Young Readers


Description

The 1968 Detroit Tigers always will mean something very special to the city of Detroit. No one player is a better symbol of the relationship between the '68 team and the city than is Willie Horton. When eight-year-old Willie was walking the six miles from his home in Stonega, Virginia to neighboring Appalachia to play baseball, he never dreamed that one day he would star in a major league World Series. The likelihood of a successful career of any kind seemed even more remote after his family moved to Detroit, Michigan. Growing up in Detroit's "Projects," Willie had no way of knowing that one day he would give his name to a foundation dedicated to helping youngsters living in similar slum conditions. Willie Horton: Detroit's Own "Willie the Wonder" takes this warm and generous man from his disadvantaged childhood through the excitement of a baseball career, and ends with an account of his ongoing work among today's youth.

Published by Wayne State University Press

Author(s)

Other Books by Karen Elizabeth Bush: First Lady of Detroit: The Story of Marie-Thérèse Guyon, Mme Cadillac,

Reviews

"Willie Horton is Detroit. Detroit is Willie Horton. This book is supposed to be for young readers. Wrong. It is also for 73-year-old, white-haired sportswriters. A true joy for all to read. Don't miss it."

— The Detroit News