Larry Colton
Quick Facts
Biography
Lawrence Robert "Larry" Colton (born June 8, 1942), a one-time professional baseball player, is a writer and educator in Portland, Oregon, United States. Signed as a pitcher by the Philadelphia Phillies in 1964, Colton played college ball at the University of California, where he still holds the single game strikeout record (19). In 1965, he married Denise Loder, daughter of the actress Hedy Lamarr. A shoulder separation ended his big league career after a single appearance in relief for the Phillies.
Baseball career
Colton played for the Philadelphia Phillies in 1968. He played for Phillies farm team the Eugene Emeralds in 1965 when it was a Class A-Short Season Northwest League team and again in 1969 when it was a triple-A Pacific Coast League team.
Writing career
Larry Colton has published hundreds of magazine articles for publications including Esquire, New York Times, Sports Illustrated and Ladies Home Journal. The author of five books, Colton was the recipient of the 2013 Stewart H. Holbrook Literary Legacy Oregon Book Award from Oregon Literary Arts. The award honors not only his achievements as a writer, but also his work as the founder of the literary festival and writing program, Wordstock. His book Counting Coup earned him Frankfurt eBook Award in non-fiction in 2000.
Idol Time
Colton's first book, Idol Time, examined the aftermath of the Portland Trailblazers' 1977 NBA championship, and while it reached primarily a regional audience, it foreshadowed the narrative approach Colton would apply in subsequent works.
Goat Brothers
Goat Brothers, published by Doubleday in 1993, examined the lives of Colton and a select group of his fraternity brothers at the University of California from their college days in the early 1960s until the end of the 1980s. A main selection of the Book-of-the-Month Club, Goat Brothers was described in Entertainment Weekly as "engaging" and "compulsively readable." Publishers Weekly said of the book "Colton powerfully tells the stories of the five men's search for self-worth, their difficulty in communicating their feelings, and their anger toward women.
Counting Coup
Colton's third book, Counting Coup, again focused on group dynamics, but in this case rather than observing a group of prominent men, Colton chronicled the dramatic season of a high school girls' basketball team in Montana. The team's star was the descendent of a Crow scout at Little Big Horn. Sharon LaForge's charisma animates Colton's account of the Hardin Lady Bulldogs' quest for a state championship. The book received excellent reviews. Katherine Dunn, author of Geek Love, observed that Colton placed his subjects "in the intricately tangled social contexts that lend weight and meaning far beyond the game." Counting Coup won the 2000 International E-Book of the Year Award.
No Ordinary Joes
No Ordinary Joes is Colton's 2010 account of the sinking of the US Navy submarine USS Grenadier, a little-known episode of World War II. Based on extensive interviews with several of the survivors, No Ordinary Joes borrows from the narrative strategy of Goat Brothers to tell the interlocking stories of four shipmates on the Grenadier, from their childhoods through enlistment, courtships and deployment, and on to the horrors of life in a Japanese slave labor camp. "The book's content is fresh", wrote a reviewer in The Oregonian, "and the narrative is superb." NPR said of the book, "The book recounts the soldiers' harrowing experiences as POWs, but it is also, at its core, an incredible love story."
Southern League
Colton's 2013 book returns to his baseball roots. The story of the 1964 Birmingham Barons, Southern League sets the season of the first integrated professional baseball team in Alabama in the context of the Civil Rights Movement and the struggle for racial equality. While the pennant race gives the book its narrative momentum, the counterpoint provided by Colton's research into Birmingham's complicated racial past gives poignancy to the friendships formed among the players, black and white, and the team's affection for its young manager, Haywood Sullivan, a white Alabaman who would go on to own the Boston Red Sox. Two-time Pulitzer-prize winning reporter Richard Ben Cramer, wrote of Southern League: "When I read Counting Coup, I was staggered by Larry Colton's ability to persuade a group of high school girls to share their heart's secrets, so I am not surprised that for Southern League he could get a bunch of aging baseball players to remember the hopes and fears of their minor league days. The breadth of Colton's reporting here, placing the Birmingham Barons' 1964 season squarely into the context of the civil rights era, is a narrative tour de force."