Bronc Burnett
Encyclopedia
Bronc Burnett is the central character is a series of 27 football, baseball, and scouting novels set in Sonora, New Mexico for adolescent boys written by Wilfred McCormick between 1948 and 1967. The series was published by G.P. Putnam's Sons (#1-11), by David McKay
(#12-23), and by Bobbs-Merrill (#24-27). Grosset & Dunlap
reissued the entire series with some changes in the order of the books, and with both dust jackets and full color cover illustrations. Some titles were included in Grosset & Dunlap's "Famous Sports Stories" Collection.
In 2001, Mark Mvaric wondered if Bronc's "hokey wholesomeness" was relevant in the new millennium and commented, "Each installment of the Burnett series offers a morality play about sports and life—coping with criticism, for instance, or learning humility in the face of success. Was America ever so innocent, baseball ever so pure? Archetypes people Bronc's world: his loyal sidekick, catcher Fat Crompton; Cap'n Al, the gruff but lovable coach—"solid as a granite boulder"—who imparts the wisdom of his eight years in the big leagues; the insufferable Fibate Jones, team scorekeeper and resident gadfly. This is a world in which baseball-hungry townsfolk build the high school stands by hand; in which sheriff Pole Drinkwater works behind the plate, immune to the "yip-yaps" heckling him; in which the good guys are lanky, broad-shouldered, nimble-footed, and the villains sport names like Slug Langenegger and Sluice Derrick."
David McKay Publications
David McKay Publications was an American book publisher which also published some of the first comic books, including the long-running titles Ace Comics, King Comics, and Magic Comics; as well as collections of such popular comic strips as Blondie, Dick Tracy, and Mandrake the Magician...
(#12-23), and by Bobbs-Merrill (#24-27). Grosset & Dunlap
Grosset & Dunlap
Grosset & Dunlap is a United States book publisher founded in 1898.The company was purchased by G. P. Putnam's Sons in 1982 and today is part of the British publishing conglomerate, Pearson PLC through its American subsidiary Penguin Group....
reissued the entire series with some changes in the order of the books, and with both dust jackets and full color cover illustrations. Some titles were included in Grosset & Dunlap's "Famous Sports Stories" Collection.
In 2001, Mark Mvaric wondered if Bronc's "hokey wholesomeness" was relevant in the new millennium and commented, "Each installment of the Burnett series offers a morality play about sports and life—coping with criticism, for instance, or learning humility in the face of success. Was America ever so innocent, baseball ever so pure? Archetypes people Bronc's world: his loyal sidekick, catcher Fat Crompton; Cap'n Al, the gruff but lovable coach—"solid as a granite boulder"—who imparts the wisdom of his eight years in the big leagues; the insufferable Fibate Jones, team scorekeeper and resident gadfly. This is a world in which baseball-hungry townsfolk build the high school stands by hand; in which sheriff Pole Drinkwater works behind the plate, immune to the "yip-yaps" heckling him; in which the good guys are lanky, broad-shouldered, nimble-footed, and the villains sport names like Slug Langenegger and Sluice Derrick."
List of titles
- The Three-Two Pitch (1948)
- Legion Tourney (1948)
- Fielder's Choice (1949)
- Flying Tackle (1949)
- Bases Loaded (1950)
- Rambling Halfback (1950)
- Grand Slam Homer (1951)
- Quick Kick (1951)
- Eagle Scout (1952)
- The Big Ninth (1958)
- The Last Put Out (1960)
- One O'Clock Hitter (1960)
- Stranger In The Backfield (1960)
- The Bluffer (1961)
- Man In Motion (1961)
- Rebel With A Glove (1961)
- Too Late To Quit (1962)
- Once A Slugger (1963)
- Rough Stuff (1963)
- The Throwing Catcher (1964)
- The Right-End Option (1964)
- The Go-Ahead Runner (1965)
- Seven In Front (1965)
- Tall At The Plate (1966)
- No Place For Heros (1966)
- The Incomplete Pitcher (1967)
- One Bounce Too Many (1967)