This deserves an entry all of its own. The last books in Tom Hoffarth’s 30/30 feature include: Willie Mays Aikens: Safe at Home, by Gregory Jordan. Upshot: Hoffarth’s title for the piece — Aiken’s journey from a prison sentence to a whole lot of paragraphs, correctly punctuated — belies his wrap, in which he describes […]
These come from the New Books Network which features news on several different genres, including sports. These two, both by Bruce Berglund, feature interviews with Robert Fitts, author of Banzai Babe Ruth: Baseball, Espionage, and Assassination during the 1934 Tour of Japan; Lee Congdon, author of Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and Remembrances of Things […]
Tagged as:
Banzai Babe Ruth,
Bill Veeck,
Paul Dickson
Editor’s note: JTA published this excerpt from Jewish Major Leaguers in Their Own Words: Oral Histories of 23 Players, edited by Peter Ephross and published by McFarland. Talkin’ baseball: Jewish Major Leaguers and why we care about them by Peter Ephross Nearly all fans of baseball history have heard of Hank Greenberg. Most have heard […]
Tagged as:
Al Rosen,
Hank Greenberg,
Lou Limmer,
Ron Blomberg,
Sandy Koufax
One of my long-overdue projects is an entry about the BBC, located at 67 East 11th Street in Manhattan. The tiny store run by Jay Goldberg is part gift shop, part gallery and features an eclectic collection of photos, sketches, and paintings, as well as the occasional sculpture or word-work. Goldberg, a former sports agent, […]
The good news: More than half way to the goal of 501 books. The bad news: it takes me away from the blog. Oh well, hang around. It will be worth it in the end. In the meantime, here are a few items for your consideration: Out of Left Field, Rebecca Alpert’s history of Jewish […]
Tagged as:
Joe DiMaggio,
Lou Perini,
Mark Attanasio,
Negro league baseball,
Rebecca Alpert
Three baseball entries are among the non-fiction titles on The New York Times as “100 Notable Books of 2010.” THE LAST BOY: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood. By Jane Leavy. (Harper/HarperCollins, $27.99.) Many biographies of Mantle have been written, but Leavy connects the dots in new and disturbing ways. THE LAST HERO: […]
Tagged as:
Hank Aaron,
Howard Bryant,
James Hirsch,
Jane Leavy,
Mickey Mantle,
New York Times,
Willie Mays
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
The Brian Lehrer Show ran this segment on Aug. 20 following the news of Roger Clemens’ indictment. The two guests on the show were Michael O’Keeffe of the New York Daily News, who collaborated on American Icon: The Fall of Roger Clemens and the Rise of Steroids in America’s Pastime, and William C. Rhoden of […]
Tagged as:
Brian Lehrer,
NPR,
PED,
Roger Clemens,
steroids,
WYNC
Chicago Magazine published this profile of former Cub and current author/ESPN BBTN analyst Doug Glanville following the release of his excellent new memoir, The Game from Where I Stand, which it describes as “a blend of recast Times columns and new baseball-centric ruminations filed under broad chapter headings such as ‘The Stresses of the Game’ […]
Tagged as:
Chicago Magazine,
Doug Glanville
To mark the opening of spring training, I will be making my podcast debut tomorrow (Feb. 16) at 11 p.m. Eastern, on BBA Baseball Talk, a weekly program on Blog Talk Radio. The Baseball Bloggers Alliance is a confederation of 132 blogs working together for collaboration and discussion possibilities. This one-hour show will discuss the […]
Haven’t done one of these for awhile, so here goes: The Dallas Morning News ran this review of The Wizard of Waxahachie by Warren Corbett, the biography of baseball lifer Paul Richards. Upshot: “Those who love baseball’s strategies and myriad statistics probably will relish this book. The author blends them seamlessly into an entertaining, warts-and-all […]
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baseball books
I don’t know what else there is to say about McGwire. Some, like Joe Posnanski (twice) and my literary hero, Tony Kornheiser, are more forgiving. Mr. Tony spoke about the “confessions of Mark McGwire” on both Pardon the Interruption and his eponymous radio program on ESPN 980 in DC. Others, like Ken Rosenthal, are much […]
Tagged as:
Magazines,
Mark McGwire,
PED,
Sportswriters,
steroids,
televsion
The New York Times ran this article today about the increased number of women in administrative positions in baseball. How coincidental, then, to find this entry from the We’ve Got Heart blog, featuring interviews some of these ladies as well as author Jane “Confessions of a She-Fan” Heller and, coming soon. Cait “Crazy ’08” Murhpy.
Tagged as:
baseball management,
women in baseball
(Full disclosure: I contributed a chapter to The Miracle Has Landed: The Amazin’ Story of How the 1969 Mets Shocked the World.) On the Black, a Mets-centric blog, featured a three part series on this new collaborative effort edited by Matthew Silverman and Ken Samelson. Part 1 Part 2 (an interview with Silverman) Part 3 […]
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New York Mets
According to CantonRep.com, the Kent State Univ. Press will reprint a “facsimile edition” of Fred Lieb and Stan Baumgartner’s 1953 team history of the Phillies, which was part of a series of baseball club histories published by G.P. Putnam. Several years ago, the Southern Illinois University Press was handling this project, reissuing books about the […]
Tagged as:
Fred Lieb,
Philadlephia Phillies,
Wold Series
The New York Times Book Review published this article by David Leonhardt, who writes a weekly economics column for the paper. His upshot in this full-page review: Despite its engaging moments, though, “Sixty Feet, Six Inches” is mostly unsatisfying, because Gibson and Jackson play their roles as the grizzled veterans too predictably…. The men go […]
Tagged as:
Bob Gibson,
Reggie Jackson
Words, actually. And days. In recognition of the post-season, the Brian Lehrer Show on NPR had two days of baseball terms, courtesy of Erin McKean of wordnik.com. The program was so nice, they ran it twice, first on Oct. 20and an “extra innings” segment the following day. McKean, who publishes Verbatim Magaizne (to which I […]
Tagged as:
baseball dictionary,
National Public Radio
The Washington Informer, an African-American community newspaper, published this item on Larry Tye, author of the new Satchel Paige biography, prior to his Sept. 9 appearance at the Smithsonian. Jim Bouton chats with ESPN’s Jim Caple in this video/article. (Here’s a different video:) Every year come August, you can count on a bunch of articles […]
Tagged as:
baseball books
WallStCheatSheet ran this interview with former ML pitcher, now stock trader Todd Stottlemyre. With all the noise about steroids and Bernie Maddof, perhasp its time to think about the branding image they’re putting out. Damien: Since you were never pigeonholed as “Todd the baseball player” or “Todd the student,” when you moved through your baseball […]
Tagged as:
Todd Stottlemyre
Review roundup, April 30, Part One
April 30, 2012
This deserves an entry all of its own. The last books in Tom Hoffarth’s 30/30 feature include: Willie Mays Aikens: Safe at Home, by Gregory Jordan. Upshot: Hoffarth’s title for the piece — Aiken’s journey from a prison sentence to a whole lot of paragraphs, correctly punctuated — belies his wrap, in which he describes […]
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