In early 1969, New York City and all it represented was in disarray:
politically, criminally, and athletically. But while Simon and Garfunkel
lamented the absence of a sports icon like Joe DiMaggio, a modern
Lancelot rode forth to lead the New York Mets to heights above and
beyond all sports glory. This book tells the complete, unvarnished story
of the great Tom Seaver, that rarest of all American heroes, the New
York Sports Icon. In a city that produces not mere mortals but sports
gods, Seaver represented the last of a breed. His deeds, his times, his
town--it was part of a vanishing era, an era of innocence. In 1969, six
years after John F. Kennedy's assassination, Seaver and the Mets were
the last gasp of idealism before free agency, Watergate, and cynicism.
Here is the story of "Tom Terrific" of the "Amazin' Mets," a man worthy
of a place alongside DiMaggio, Ruth, Mantle, and Namath in the pantheon
of New York idols.