comicbooks.com Join Free
Homeralph kiner#1Read

★ comicbooks.com Reading Room

ralph kiner #1

One Shot Press · 36 pages

Free to read · restored edition by comicbooks.com · Issue details →

ralph kiner #1 — page 1 of 36
1 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 2 of 36
2 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 3 of 36
3 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 4 of 36
4 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 5 of 36
5 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 6 of 36
6 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 7 of 36
7 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 8 of 36
8 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 9 of 36
9 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 10 of 36
10 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 11 of 36
11 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 12 of 36
12 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 13 of 36
13 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 14 of 36
14 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 15 of 36
15 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 16 of 36
16 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 17 of 36
17 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 18 of 36
18 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 19 of 36
19 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 20 of 36
20 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 21 of 36
21 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 22 of 36
22 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 23 of 36
23 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 24 of 36
24 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 25 of 36
25 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 26 of 36
26 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 27 of 36
27 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 28 of 36
28 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 29 of 36
29 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 30 of 36
30 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 31 of 36
31 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 32 of 36
32 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 33 of 36
33 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 34 of 36
34 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 35 of 36
35 / 36
ralph kiner #1 — page 36 of 36
36 / 36

This is a true life story of Pittsburgh Pirates slugger Ralph Kiner, chronicling his rise to baseball stardom from his early days at Alhambra High School in 1938, where he struggled to master baseball until friend Harry Johnston advised him to focus exclusively on the sport. The narrative follows Kiner's development through his minor league career with the Sacred Heart team and his 1943 signing with the Toronto Maple Leafs, where his hitting prowess became immediately apparent. His move to the Pittsburgh Pirates is celebrated, and the story culminates in his record-breaking 1947 season in which he hit 51 home runs, tied Babe Ruth's single-season record, and became a baseball immortal alongside legends like Jimmy Foxx and Hank Greenberg.

Restored edition © comicbooks.com. Our digitization, remastering, and presentation are our own work.

See something wrong with this issue? Report it.