While known as a moderately effective pitcher, both as a starter and a reliever, Brosnan gained greater fame by becoming one of the first athletes to publish a candid personal diary. Up to that time, such books were "sanitized" for the general public and used
ghostwriters. Instead, Brosnan's self-penned book,
The Long Season, a season which found him being traded from
St. Louis to
Cincinnati at approximately the halfway point of the 1959 baseball season, touched on the subjects of racial awareness, boredom, fatigue, and skirt-chasing by players, as well as the never-ending stress of trying to maintain a position on the big league roster. Two years later, Brosnan again kept a diary, a fortuitous circumstance as the Reds would win the National League championship in 1961, before falling to the
New York Yankees in the
World Series. Brosnan's book was published under the appropriate title
Pennant Race. Brosnan's books garnered both praise and criticism. Pulitzer-prize winning columnist
Red Smith praised
The Long Season as "...caustic and candid, and, in a way, courageous." Others, such as
Joe Garagiola, famously called Brosnan a "kooky beatnik." Writing in the
Chicago Tribune in July 1960, then-White Sox president
Bill Veeck acknowledged that
The Long Season was "delightful", but that "Brosnan has his say about many who may have, in times past, had their say about him. This just doesn't seem to come off so well, and tends to lessen the impact and enjoyment of his undeniably colorful material". ==Post career==