Review roundup, April 3

2013 title

Time to play catch-up. This is the period when many newspapers run their reviews of baseball titles to coincide with the beginning of the season. A few books are getting a sizable proportion of attention. And if I understand the concept of zero-sum games, that means others which might be just as good but lack […]

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Previews are us

2013 title

Congratulations to the Houston Astros, now proudly atop the AL West. Shows what all the baseball pundits know. That’s what the preview issues are all about: picking who will finish where, which team will win it all, who will be the big award winners come the end of the season. The two primary publications, to […]

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Bookshelf Q&A: Billy Sample

2013 title

Billy Sample, who enjoyed a nine-year career, primarily with the Texas Rangers, has turned to “act two” of his life, literally. Sample served as executive producer, co-director, and writer of Reunion 108, a feature film about to make its official release. From the IMDB plot summary: Two generations of professional baseball players return for a […]

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We’re #1!

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

At least among the researchers and library set. According to Amazon.com, 501 Baseball Books is: #1 in Books > Education & Reference > Writing, Research & Publishing Guides > Publishing & Books > Bibliographies & Indexes > Literature

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Can you hear me now?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The previous article from The New Republic had a link to another baseball story in the magazine: the possible flaws in MLB’s partnership with T-Mobile to supply teams with cell phones for communicate with the bullpen.

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Strangely perfect together: Baseball and the Amish

Magazines

Kent Russel contributed this lengthy piece about the Amish affinity for the national pastime in The New Republic. What better group to emulate the original game, before TV and artificial grass. Given their proclivity for privacy, I wonder if the kids in the photos are actually Amish, or just models dressed that way.

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Baseball Bookshelf almanac, March 22

Birthday greetings

Literary birthday greetings: 1952 – Bob Costas, announcer Fair Ball: A Fan’s Case for Baseball, by Costas. Broadway, 2000. Also on this date: 1962: A former member of the New York Giants requesting anonymity reveals that Bobby Thomson’s home run in the 1951 playoffs against the Brooklyn Dodgers was helped by a sign-stealing clubhouse spy. […]

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501 update: Christmas/Hanukka/Kwanza come early

2013 title

I went to the bookstore and what did I see? 501 Baseball Books, looking back at me… Made my semi-regular trip to the Barnes and Noble near my office. Now, the book doesn’t officially come out until April 1 (no fooling, nyuk, nyuk, nyuk), but since I know some readers — to whom I am […]

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Before there was Kevin Costner, there was Jimmy Stewart

Baseball in movies

I bring this up because I was reminded of one of my all-time favorite actor’s baseball-related oeuvres by Jonathan Coe’s new pictorial biography, Jimmy Stewart: A Wonderful Life. Stewart’s career is often discussed in two broad periods: pre-World War II, when he generally played lighter, more genial roles, and following the war (in which he […]

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Boo-flippin’-hoo

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

So the entitled Yankee fans are turning their backs on the Bronx Bombers because of a few injuries? Welcome to the world of every other baseball fan. Richard Sandomir chronicled the last time the Yankees fell so low — 1965 — which “No current Yankees player was alive to witness.” He gives a nod to […]

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Because you can put seaon tickets on your bookshelf…or a subpoena

"Oddballs"

  Not content with destroying their previous franchise — my beloved Montreal Expos — the current management of the Miami Marlins are intent on ruining — for the second time — another team as well as crushing the souls of whatever fan base they’ve managed to muster. Now they have the nerve to sue a […]

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Baseball Book Clubs: ‘Hot Corner’ does Frantic Frank Lane

2013 title

Baseball Nation’s Hot Corner Book Club’s latest consideration is Bob Vanderberg’s new biography of Baseball’s Ultimate Wheeler Dealer (according to the subtitle. While blogger Rob Neyer starts out hopefully — “it’s real good so far.” — he concludes his entry on a quizzical note when he writes “It doesn’t look like the whole book’s going […]

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Baseball previews, hiaku-style

"Oddballs"

Since I write a weekly Torah haiku as part of my many functions at the New Jersey Jewish News, I thought I’d give some props to Diane Firstman, who blogs at the thoughtful and often “out there” Value Over Replacement Grit for her season preview haikus posted at ESPN.com. Brewers BrewCrew is Hartless And Gamel […]

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And the category is…

2013 title

An unexpected, but most welcome, surprise: Thrilled that (as of this moment) 501 is in the top 100 baseball titles, but it’s also the #3 title in the category of “Literary Bibliographies & Indexes,” as well as #47 in “General Books & Reading.”  

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But I thought I was “Mr. Baseball”

"Oddballs"

Actually when I was a head counselor at Camp Maromac, they called me Dr. Wakeup, but that’s another story. Anyway, Rob Neyer posted this about who the real Mr. baseball is, or should be, or something like that, offering a quote from the Dickson Baseball Dictionary.  

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Artist exhibition: Dick Perez

Annoucements

The iconic illustrator will show pieces of his baseball collection at Agora Gallery, 530 West 25th Street in Manhattan from March 26 to April 16. An Opening Night event will be held on Wednesday, March 27. Admission is free, but you have to register.

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Review roundup, March 18

2013 title

The AZ Snakepit, a Diamondbacks’-centric blog, posted this about John Sexton’s Baseball as a Road to God: Seeing Beyond the Game. Upshot: “Overall it’s a fine baseball book that is interesting most because it examines baseball in a manner more critical than most. The average baseball book is no better than a collection of trivia, […]

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Lest we forget: Ruth Ann Steinhagen

Lest We Forget

A lot of publications are call this woman — who died last December at the age of 83 —  the “inspiration” for the novel The Natural. I think that’s wrong. To me it was Eddie Waitkus, whom Steinhagen shot in a hotel room in 1949, that served as the inspiration. After all, it was Roy […]

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“Backs” back agaian

"Oddballs"

Last week I wrote about the little factoids that appear on the back of baseball cards. Rob Neyer at baseball Nation picks up on that theme with this post focusing on the 2013 Bowman set.

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Whole lot of shakin’ goin’ on

2013 title

Got a nice writeup for 501 from Benjamin Hill at MiLB.com yesterday, which you can read here. Perhaps just as important, he sent this link to videos of several more teams doing the Harlem Shake, Gangham Minor League style. Enjoy.

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