Extra literary: Rutner, born this date in 1919, appeared in an even dozen games for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1947. He even had one home run. But he was immortalized by Eliot “Eight Men Out” Asinof as the inspiration for the main character in his 1955 novel about the struggles of a veteran minor leaguer, […]
Tagged as:
baseball fiction,
Eliot Asinof,
Mickey Rutner
Wallace will read from his 2010 title, Diamond Ruby: A Novel, at the WORD bookstore, 126 Franklin St., Brooklyn, NY, tomorrow (Feb. 24) at 7:30 p.m. Wallace, who has several non-fiction baseball books to his credit, will be joined by Randy Susan Meyers, author of The Murderer’s Daughters. For information, call 718-383-0096 or visit the […]
Tagged as:
baseball fiction,
Diamond Ruby,
Joseph Wallace
The new RKBB podcast features an interview with author Joseph Wallace, author of Diamond Ruby: A Novel. This is Wallace’s first foray into fiction., but not baseball. His previous work includes World Series: An Opinionated Chronicle, World Series: An Opinionated Chronicle, and The Baseball Anthology: 125 Years of Stories, Poems, Articles, Photographs, Drawings, Interviews, Cartoons, […]
Tagged as:
baseball fiction,
Diamond Ruby,
Joseph Wallace
(and other media, of course.) With the close of 2010, I thought I take a few moments to review the highlights of the past 12 months as pertains to our favorite topic. It’s been a banner year for baseball biographies. We’ve enjoyed munch-anticipated titles from major publishers on Hall of Famers such as Hank Aaron, […]
Tagged as:
baseball books
They don’t get much more literary than this, which comes from the Hall of Fame’s Time Wiles via Facebook: Happy birthday to one of the first baseball writers, Jane Austen. From Northanger Abbey: …it was not very wonderful that Catherine, who had by nature nothing heroic about her, should prefer cricket, baseball, riding on horseback, […]
Tagged as:
Jane Austen,
Northanger Abbey
When I play ball, most of my teammates call me Ronnie. When I was in college, they called me Kap, a take-off on my name coupled with the Kangolish-type of headgear I always wore (at camp in the Laurentian Mountains, they called me Casquette for the same reason). When I look for those literary birthday […]
Tagged as:
baseball fiction,
baseball nicknames,
Philip Roth
An occasional wrap-up of things that have fallen through the cracks. A review of Baseball Is America: Origins and History: the Good, the Bad, and the Ugly by Victor Alexander Baltov, Jr. A review of Fifty-Nine in ’84, Edward Achorn’s biography of Hoss Radbourn. Len Berman, author of a new kid’s book on the greats […]
Roy Halladay’s no-hitter in the NLDS naturally brought back memories of Don Larsen perfect game in the 1956 World Series (and forgive a soapbox moment, but I wish they would stop lumping all post-season records together; Halladay’s marvelous game does not make him and Larsen the only pitchers to throw no-hitters in the playoffs, as […]
CBS conducted an interview with Philip Roth on the publication of his new novel, Nemesis. One of the questions posed to the author the The Great American Novel: “When you lived here, and you were growing up,” asked Braver, “did you want to be famous? Did you want to be somebody whose name everybody knew?” […]
Tagged as:
Fiction,
Great American Novel,
Philip Roth
As the days dwindle down to a precious few, here’s an attempt at a major catch-up: I met Rob Fitts at the SABR convention in Washington, DC, last year. His specialty is Japanese baseball. Here’s his site on baseball cards. The NY Times‘ Alan Schwarz covered the convention’s always-entertaining trivia contest. You know the theoretical […]
Tagged as:
Babe Ruth,
Baseball Cards,
Dave Duncan,
Fiction
Trying to play catch-up once again: Reviews of Michael Shapiro‘s Bottom of the Ninth: Branch Rickey, Casey Stengel, and the Daring Scheme to Save Baseball from Itself and Cardboard Gods: An All-American Tale Told Through Baseball Cards, by Josh Wilker, can be found on Meals from the Marketplace. Upshots: Bottom of the Ninth — “he […]
The top baseball books, according to Amazon.com as of Friday, Sept. 2. Title Rank General Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, by Michael Lewis 1 The Baseball Codes: Beanballs, Sign Stealing, and Bench-Clearing Brawls: The Unwritten Rules of America’s Pastime by Jason Turbow and Michael Duca 2 The Natural, by Bernard Malamud 3 […]
Tagged as:
baseball books
The man who hit “the shot heard ’round the world” died yesterday at the age of 86. Here’s the Richard Goldstein obituary in The New York Times. There have been several books about Thomson’s heroics. His home run is a staple of baseball lore in both fact and fictional versions. The Giants Win the Pennant! […]
Tagged as:
Bobby Thomson
by Joseph Wallace. Touchstone, 2010. Wallace, who’s known more for his coffee table books (The Baseball Anthology: 125 Years of Stories, Poems, Articles, Photographs, Drawings, Interviews, Cartoons, and Other Memorabilia; Grand Old Game: 365 Days of Baseball; World Series: An Opinionated Chronicle; and The Autobiography of Baseball: The Inside Story from the Stars Who Played […]
Tagged as:
Joseph Wallace
The wife and daughter are making a college tour, so I’m taking the opportunity to visit an antiquarian bookstore down the street, make a few entries, and work on another project. So here’s a bit of what’s going on lately: Birthday greetings, Rocky Colavito, who turns 77 today. The slugger primarily played for the Tigers […]
Tagged as:
baseball books
Baseball in Folklore and Fiction, by Tristram Potter Coffin Rvive Books, 2010 Originally published as The Old Ball Game in 1971, The Mudville Heritage considers the hugely different way in which baseball was portrayed in the early to mid half of the 20th century. Coffin, emeritus professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania, takes […]
Tagged as:
baseball fiction,
Tristram Potter Coffin
Joseph E. Wallace is probably better known for his well-produced coffee table books — World Series: An Opinionated Chronicle, The Autobiography of Baseball: The Inside Story from the Stars Who Played the Game, and Baseball: 100 Classic Moments in the History of the Game, among others. But he recently published Diamond Ruby, a novel (very) […]
Tagged as:
baseball fiction,
Joseph Wallace
I guess I’m one of the few that read this one. Dwight Garner wrote this profile of Tom Grimes — author of Season’s End: A Novel — in connection with his new book, Mentor. But now Mr. Grimes had finished his big new book, a Don DeLillo-ish novel about baseball that would eventually be titled […]
Tagged as:
baseball author,
Season's End,
Tom Grimes
Apropos of my recent review of 7: The Mickey Mantle Novel, author Peter Golenbock was kind enough to answer a few questions –on his birthday, no less — about the controversial project. * * * Bookshelf: After all those non-fiction projects, what was it that prompted to to venture into a different genre? PG: I […]
Tagged as:
Mickey Mantle,
Peter Golenbock