ROY CAMPANELLA was the backbone of the great Brooklyn Dodgers teams of the late 1940s and 1950s, alongside such other Hall of Famers as Jackie Robinson and Duke Snider. An outstanding defensive catcher and a powerful slugger, Campy won the National League MVP Award three times. But everything changed on a rainy January night in 1958 when Campy's car skidded off the road and he was left paralyzed below the neck. For the second time in his life, Roy Campanella would become a pioneer, this time off the field. Neil Lanctot's Campy is the magnificent, authoritative biography of this exuberant, gifted athlete.
--"The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"
--Russ Stanton, "Los Angeles Times
"
--James S. Hirsch, author of "Willie Mays: The Life, the Legend
"
--Stan Hochman, "The Philadelphia Daily News
"
--Budd Bailey, "The Buffalo News
"
--Allen Barra, "The Newark Star-Ledger
"
--Dick Kreck, "The Denver Post
"
--Chris Foran, "Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
"
--Jonathan Eig, author of "Luckiest Man: The Life and Death of Lou Gehrig" and "Opening Day: The Story of Jackie Robinson's First Season"
--Mark Hodermarsky, "Cleveland Plain Dealer
"
--Bob D'Angelo, "Tampa Bay Tribune
"