Coming soon on the Baseball Bookshelf podcast…

2013 title

I don’t usually do this, but since Peter Schwartz, co-author with John Sexton and Thomas Oliphant of Baseball as a Road to God: Seeing Beyond the Game was nice enough to tweet about it, I figure, why not. Schwartz will be a guest speaker at the Bergino Baseball Clubhouse on March 6 (weather permitting; that’s […]

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For whom the bell tolls — Derek Jeter

Uncategorized

Let the death watch begin, metaphorically speaking. Derek Jeter announced that 2014 will be his last season. Not totally surprising that he did it, but it was the manner in which he did that I found odd. Rather than have a press conference, managed by the Yankees, he posted it on Facebook. So when I […]

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Here’s to the ‘winners’

2013 title

Awhile back I notched my 100,000th visitor. To celebrate the occasion, I put up copies to The Kid: The Immortal Life of Ted Williams, by Bill Bradlee Jr., and The 34-Ton Bat: The Story of Baseball as Told Through Bobbleheads, Cracker Jacks, Jockstraps, Eye Black, and 375 Other Strange and Unforgettable Objects, by Steve Rushin, […]

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Creativity counts

"Annuals"

I picked up second “annual” of the year. Gotta say, how about a little imagination, guys? It’s pretty lazy (and artistically lame), to fall back on featuring Derek Jeter and David Wright on the New York regional edition, especially in consecutive years. Just sayin’.

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Bits and pieces, Feb. 7

2014 title

“Roy Berger, a baseball aficionado since his childhood days growing up in New York, has written a humorous and popular first person look at the world of fantasy baseball camps, The Most Wonderful Week of the Year.” Now I realize this piece comes from a marketing company, but I’m still looking forward to reading it […]

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Smithsonian exhibit invites visitors to ‘Root, Root, Root’ for the Hometown Team

Baseball and pop culture

Editor’s Note: Not exclusively baseball, but pertinent enough to include here. The New Jersey Council for the Humanities, in partnership with the Smithsonian Institution Museum on Main Street Program and six host locations in New Jersey, welcomes the newest Smithsonian traveling exhibition, Hometown Teams: How Sports Shape America, to the Garden State in 2014. What […]

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Research bonanza

Academic/scholarly journals

From Andy Strasberg, via Facebook: Here’s a baseball scoop for fans that live in the San Diego area. Baseball historian and statistician, Bill Weiss of Northern California has donated his massive baseball research material and books to the San Diego Baseball Research Center located on the 8th floor of the new San Diego Central Library. […]

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A little more about Ralph Kiner

Lest We Forget

Ralph Kiner was such a New York institution, I thought it appropriate to include more reactions to his passing: The New York Times called on their resident baseball obit writer Bruce Weber to write this lengthy piece while sports media columnist Richard Sandomir produced this appreciation. I found this quote from Howie Rose especially telling […]

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The Bookshelf Review: Mortal Stakes

Fiction

by Robert B. Parker, 1975, Houghton Mifflin. I loved the TV series Spenser for Hire, based on Parker’s crime novels. Then I started reading the books and I became addicted. But not in the way you’re addicted to delicious potato chips or similar things that start out as enjoyable until one day you discover you’re […]

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Lest we forget: Ralph Kiner

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Ralph Kiner, one of the game’s all-time great sluggers, passed away today at the age of 91. Kiner, who led the National League in home runs for seven straight seasons, was favorite of mine on one of the best trio of broadcasters in baseball. He was the last to go from his NY Mets booth-mates […]

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The Babe and the original “Hammerin’ Hank”

Biography

Posted on Facebook by John Rosengren, author of Hank Greenberg: The Hero of Heroes: Babe Ruth’s birthday today. Born 1895. Hank Greenberg thought Babe was the greatest ballplayer ever. In early 1947 he visited Ruth at his Riverside apartment while the Babe was recovering from throat cancer surgery and on a doctor-prescribed beer diet to […]

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Snow, snow, go away

Because I can...

After digging out three times yesterday, including two bouts of shoveling after the town’s plows pushed back the snow I had already cleared from my driveway, I thought I could get out this morning. Ehhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. Wrong. Like thieves in the night they came back in the wee morning hours to once again block our driveways, […]

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My sentiments exactly.

"Oddballs"
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Thank heaven for little girls

Because I can...

This sweet piece by my friend Howard Megdal, author of The Baseball Talmud, reminded me of when my daughter Rachel was a little girl and I tried to get her involved in baseball. I didn’t start as early with her, but she was into it for a couple of years. One of my favorite drawings […]

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Gettin’ the old soup bone in shape.

Because I can...

Never too early to start… Should have quit after the first toss.

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Guilty as charged

Because I can...

I’m a bit chagrined to admit, but I don’t read as much of the Sunday New York Times as I should. But once in a while I’ll find something that makes me go “Hmmm.” So here’s one from yesterday’s Week in Review section about “Scribbling in the Margins.” Now, while I would never deface a […]

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2014 title

When I was a kid, I looked forward with great anticipation to the release of the new set of Topps baseball cards. Now… From JewishMajorLeaguers.org: Order Now to assure delivery in time for Passover and Opening Day. We thought we were done in 2010, but you’ve asked us to keep this tradition going! This 50-card […]

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Now that I have your attention…

Because I can...

The Super Bowl is over; spring training still doesn’t open for a couple of weeks. Someone should come up with a name describing this period, where all there is, is basketball and hockey. Kind of a sports limbo. But now it’s time to catch up. Started in earnest working on the next book, a history […]

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The first robin, er, baseball magazine of the year

"Annuals"

Not the fantasy issue, but the real deal. Of course, mine is the New York version, with Derek Jeter and David Wright on the cover, but most of the cover items remain the same.

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Lest we forget: Pete Seeger

Because I can...

The iconic folk singer/activist died yesterday at the age of 94. These videos I found on Youtube were posted by Rolland Moussa who told me in an e-mail, “[Pete] wanted me to film it because he wanted to be known as an American who loved baseball, not labeled as a Communist.. No one had a […]

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