The May/June issue of ForeWord Magazine, a publication that specializes in small and university presses, carries my feature on nine 2009 baseball titles, including: Under the March Sun: The Story of Spring Training High-Flying Birds: The 1942 St. Louis Cardinal Babe Ruth: Remembering the Bambino in Stories, Photos & Memorabilia Yankee Colors: The Glory Years […]
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baseball books
The current edition includes reveiws of The Girl Who Thre Butterflies; Ed Barrow: The Bulldog Who Built the Yankees’ First Dynasty; Roger Clemens and the Rage for Baseball Immortality; and news about SABR book award winners Tom Swift (Chief Bender’s Burden) and Ronald M. Selter (Ballparks of the Deadball Era). SABR Bibliography Committee Newsletter, April […]
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newsletters,
SABR
Brought to you by the folks who produce the Sports-reference sites. The site basically consists of links to lists category. There’s no commentary here, but it’s still a fair source for basic publishers’ info. That said, the link to new releases is woefully inadequate, listing only 46 books and DVDs at this point, with a […]
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baseball books
The Story of the Sensational Baseball Song, by Amy Whorf McGuiggan. University of Nebraska Press, 2009. This slim volume would seem to be the companion for last year’s Baseball Greatest Hit. While the latter was almost a who’s who, what;’s what and where’s where of the game’s unofficial anthem, McGuiggan’s slim volume concentrates more on […]
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Baseball music,
Take Me Out to the Ball Game
When it comes to the national pastime, female athletes find many doors closed despite laws designed to afford them equal opportunities. Marilyn Cohen chronicles these issues in her new book, No Girls in the Clubhouse: The Exclusion of Women from Baseball (McFarland). Although girls and women have played the game since the mid-19th century, their […]
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Marilyn Cohen,
women in baseball
At the risk of blowing my own horn, I wanted to say that my essays on Shawn Green, Hank Greenberg, and Sandy Koufax are included in the recently-released Encyclopedia of Jewish American Popular Culture, edited by Jack. R. Fischel with Susan M. Ortmann (Greenwood Press). I’m kvelling.
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Hank Greenberg,
Sandy Koufax,
Shawn Green
SABR’s Deadball Era Committee gives the Larry Ritter Award to the best new book related to the Deadball Era. Ritter was the author/editor of The Glory of Their Times, a seminal book of baseball oral history. The 2009 winner is Ron Selter for Ballparks of the Deadball Era (McFarland). The three other Finalists for the […]
A revised version of Henry D. Fetter’s unpublished paper that received a 2007 McFarland-SABR Research Award was recently published under the title “Revising the Revisionists: Walter O’Malley, Robert Moses and the End of the Brooklyn Dodgers” in the journal New York History (Vol. 89, no. 1, Winter 2008).
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Brooklyn Dodgers,
Walter O'Malley
This piece by Bryan Curtis, a senior editor at The Daily Beast, tries to break down which pro sport really deserves to be known as “the” national pastime. The NFL is really making a push for that designation. “It recently sent out a 29-page white paper [clickable via the NY Times article] that professional football […]
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baseball vs. football,
national pastime
The BJR is produced annually by the Society for American Baseball Research. Several back issues are available from a new Web site. While the stories are usually quite good (written by SABR members), the presentation is a bit clunky. In this era of digitization, one would imagine they could “shoot” the original pages (with illustrations). […]
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Baseball Research Journal,
SABR
* SABR Bibliography Committee Newsletter
May 6, 2009
The current edition includes reveiws of The Girl Who Thre Butterflies; Ed Barrow: The Bulldog Who Built the Yankees’ First Dynasty; Roger Clemens and the Rage for Baseball Immortality; and news about SABR book award winners Tom Swift (Chief Bender’s Burden) and Ronald M. Selter (Ballparks of the Deadball Era). SABR Bibliography Committee Newsletter, April […]
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