Baseball Best-Sellers, November 25, 2016

November 25, 2016

NOTE: I have been posting these things long enough now that a few have commented that the introductory section isn’t necessary anymore. But I’m leaving it in because, to paraphrase Joe DiMaggio when asked why he played so hard all the time, there may be people who’ve never read the best-seller entries before. So on with the show…

Caveat 1: Print editions only (at least for now); because I’m old school.

Caveat 2: Since the rankings are updated every hour, these lists might not longer be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them. But it’ll be close enough for government work.

Caveat 3: Sometimes they’ll try to pull one over on you and include a book within a category that doesn’t belong. I’m using my discretion to eliminate such titles from my list. For example, for some reason a recent listing included Tarnished Heels: How Unethical Actions and Deliberate Deceit at the University of North Carolina Ended the “The Carolina Way,” which, far as I can tell, is not at all about baseball, at least not in the main.

NEW: To give a sense of context, I’m including where each book falls in the overall Amazon rankings.

  1. https://images.footballfanatics.com/FFImage/thumb.aspx?i=/productimages/_2617000/ff_2617300_full.jpg&w=340Sports Illustrated Chicago Cubs 2016 World Series Champions Commemorative Issue (502)
  2. LIFE Chicago Cubs: Champions at Last (969)
  3. Won for the Ages: How the Chicago Cubs Became the 2016 World Series Champions, by the Chicago Tribune via Triumph (1,116)
  4. The Greatest Baseball Stories Ever Told: Thirty Unforgettable Tales from the Diamond, by Jeff Silverman (2,262)
  5. Believe It!: Chicago Cubs World Series Champions, by the Chicago Sun Times. (paperback; 3,087)
  6. 2016 World Series Champions – Chicago Cubs, by Major League Baseball (3,447)
  7. The Arm: Inside the Billion-Dollar Mystery of the Most Valuable Commodity in Sports, by Jeff Passan (3,660)
  8. The Only Rule Is It Has to Work: Our Wild Experiment Building a New Kind of Baseball Team, by Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller (4,384)
  9. Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, by Michael Lewis (4,494)
  10. The Science of Hitting, by Ted Williams and John Underwood (5,677)

Cubs totles continue to dominate, but all the baseball books have moved up noticeably in the overall rankings.

NY Times: No baseball titles on the current list. Nor are there any sports titles in the paper’s annual 100 Notable Books listing.

Not on either the Amazon or Times‘ lists? 501 Baseball Books Fans Must Read before They Die. Today: 1,201,165; last week: 1,153,766. so much for riding on the cottails of the other books

If you have read 501, thanks, hope you enjoyed it, and please consider writing a review for the Amazon page; it’s never too late. There haven’t been any in awhile. Doesn’t have to be long (or even complimentary, if you didn’t like it), but anything would be appreciated. And thanks to those who have.

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