Mike Silva of NY Baseball Digest recently posted this 2007 audio interview he did with former major leaguer Terry Leach. Leach, a side-arming reliever who pitched for several teams, including the Mets, wrote about his experiences in Things Happen for a Reason: The True Story of an Itinerant Life in Baseball. Long-time baseball analyst Peter Gammons, […]
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baseball books,
ESPN,
Fritz Peterson,
Magazines,
Peter Gammons,
Terry Leach
Baseballisms.com, which is quickly becoming a favorite site, published this audio interview with Lowenfish, author Branch Rickey: Baseball’s Ferocious Gentleman. Other authors appeared on Baseballisms include Tim Wiles, Judith Testa, Peter Golenbock, Jerry Poling, Jane Heller, Sue Macy, Tim Shea, and others. Another site that features frequent author interviews, albeit not audio, is the online […]
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Baseballism,
Gelf magazine
Still trying to catch up from Yankee Fantasy Camp, so we’ll take it a few steps at a time: Richard Barbieri writes an intersting “This annotated week in baseball history” for The Hardball Times that deserves mention. The same can be said for Rob Neyer’s postings at ESPN.com, in particular his daily doses (Friday Filberts, […]
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baseball books,
Baseball Cards,
Brooklyn Dodgers
(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
I should copyright that. Actually it’s The Man With Two Arms, which sounds like a science fiction title but is really about an ambidextrous pitcher. Judging by the review from Publishers Weekly below, it seems better suited for young adults than adult adults. The book is published by Overlook and due out in February. You […]
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baseball fiction
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 […]
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Fred Lieb,
Philadlephia Phillies,
Wold Series
Several new titles consider World Series past. Two — by Joe Posnanski and Mark Frost — deal with the 1975 Red Sox-Reds contest, which was highlighted by Carlton Fisk’s game-winner in the sixth game, the closest to that point Boston had come to winning a title since 1918. The next most recent is Perfect, by […]
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Boston Red Sox,
Brooklyn Dodgers,
Chicag Cubs,
Cincinnati Reds,
Don Larsen,
Joe Posnanski,
Lew Paper,
Mike Vaccaro,
New York Giants,
New York Yankees,
World Series books
From Newsday, this review of Lew Paper’s book on Don Larsen’s World Series perfect game. Jimmy Scott, of Jimmy Scott’s High and Tight, wrote this review on Satchel, by Larry Tye. Two more sites on baseball cards: The Topps Archives (non-baseball material as well), and another devoted specifically to the 1980 Topps set. The event […]
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Bob Gibsoon,
Don Larsen,
New York Yankees,
Willie Mays
Kerel Cooper, who hosts OntheBlack, (“NY Mets Video Blog Providing News, Opinions and Analysis”), has a thought that applies to the entire organization: Reading is FUNdamental. In this video, he suggests the Mets’ would do well to devote part of their off-season (their long off-season) to boning up on the game via these titles: Getting […]
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baseball books,
New York Mets
The New York Times Sunday book section carried this double review by Harvey Araton on Mark Frost’s Game Six — this one from the 1975 Red Sox-Reds fall classic (thumbs up) and Lew Paper’s Perfect (lukewarm, at best), a recap of Don Larsen’s 1956 World Series no-hitter. From the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, this piece on popular […]
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baseball books,
Bits and Pieces
The holidays are over now so let’s get back to business. More on Posnanski and his new book, The Machine, from the Wall Street Journal; Hartford Courant; Rob Neyer and ESPN (interview); Cincinnati.com (“Latest book may be the best on Reds’ dynasty”); Baseball Prospectus Radio had this interview with the author with the author (audio […]
Joe Posnanski’s new book, The Machine, is getting a lot of buzz these days, including: A brief note from the RedlegNation blog A little mutual admiration from his former employer, the Kansas City Star A review from Letters on Pages, which claims to offer “The Best Non-Fiction Book Reviews…Ever.” Unless the writer of this piece […]
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Big Red Machine,
Cincinnati Reds,
Joe Posnanski
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 […]
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baseball books
Alan Gratz’s Brooklyn Nine, the story of a young Jewish boy’s love for baseball in the early 20th century, is featured on the cover of the September issue of Booklist, the publication of the American Library Association. The issue highlights a sports theme and includes a number “top 10” choices in several categories, such as […]
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audiobooks,
baseball fiction,
Booklist,
Scott Brick
Author Daniel Ford previews his as-yet-unfiehsed baseball novel on his epnonymous blog, Baseball Sunday with Daniel Ford. So, some of the ballparks are going the healthy route and selling fresh fruit? What are they, my mother? A review of a book about old baseball by a young fan (Major League Baseball Players of 1916, published […]
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baseball books
Larry Stone offers his list … and then some… of his favorite baseball bookss in his Seattle Times column, Hot Stone League (cute). No. 1 is Bouton’s Ball Four. but is No. 1 (addendum) is Koufax: A Lefty’s Legacy, by Jane Leavy. No. 2 on the addenda is a book I don’t think gets nearly […]
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baseball books,
Jim Boutin,
Leonard Koppett,
Sandy Koufax
Well not me, specifically, but to this guy, Seth Magalaner, the “sports literature examiner” at examiner.com, one of the hyper-local websites. Magalaner has also written on some other baseball books, including Jeff Pearlman’s The Rocket that Fell to Earth and Allan Barra’s Berra bio (say that five times fast).
Tagged as:
Ball Four,
baseball biographies,
Jim Bouton
From HowtoWatchSports.com. Upshot: The story, non-fiction, is about Oakland A’s general manager Billy Beane and how he outsmarted the rest of Major League Baseball to build a competitive team on a tiny salary budget. It talks about Beane’s failures as a player in the big leagues, and his rise to glory as a GM. Along […]
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Moneyball
From journalists/sports guy Paul Oberjuerger, this considered assessment of the new Walter O’Malley/Brooklyn Dodgers book by Michael D’Antonio. Upshot: What makes this book important? The author had access to “tens of thousands of items” from the O’Malley family archive. And, naturally, that O’Malley-centric material tends to paint Walter O’Malley in a kinder light. If only […]
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Brooklyn Dodgers,
Walter O'Malley
* Well, they do have the time for it now
October 10, 2009
Kerel Cooper, who hosts OntheBlack, (“NY Mets Video Blog Providing News, Opinions and Analysis”), has a thought that applies to the entire organization: Reading is FUNdamental. In this video, he suggests the Mets’ would do well to devote part of their off-season (their long off-season) to boning up on the game via these titles: Getting […]
Tagged as: baseball books, New York Mets
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