"An unflinching portrait of a brilliant bastard. Mr. Dickson gives the devil his due and leaves no doubt why so many people could respect Durocher's baseball genius and still hate his guts."-Wall Street Journal
"[Paul Dickson] does a great job of capturing the two sides of Durocher, the brilliant manager and the man who hung out with Frank Sinatra and liked to gamble. It's an excellent book and the chapters focusing on Durocher's handling of Jackie Robinson and his overall tenure with the Dodgers are must-read for Dodgers fans."-Los Angeles Times
"The book is worth reading twice just to see what you may have missed the first time. . . . Enjoy it and be grateful we have Paul [Dickson] among us."-Tom Hoffarth, Los Angeles Daily News
"An entertaining book about a truly unique character."-Chicago Tribune
"The biography by a veteran sportswriter makes a case for the cocky and combative star shortstop and legendary manager as both charming and insufferable, which sounds about right for the guy who both championed Jackie Robinson's arrival in Brooklyn and insulted him as fat and slow."-Bill Littlefield, Boston Globe
"[A] well researched, smoothly written biography of a complex man."-Kirkus Reviews
"Paul Dickson, baseball historian and biographer[,] packs Durocher's story with enough great stories and colorful anecdotes to fill ten normal books."-Dallas Morning News
"[A] well researched, page-turning book."-Bob D'Angelo, Books and Blogs
"The racial integration of the game, which Durocher long advocated, is the book's crucial secondary story, and it is deftly handled."-Booklist
"Dickson takes one mighty biographical swing at Leo Durocher, a colorful baseball player and manager. Durocher was a loudmouthed brawler, ladies' man, fine coach, and coiner of the expression: 'nice guys finish last.'"-Dayton Daily News