Baseball Bookshelf almanac, March 7

2012 title

Lest we forget: 1991 – Cool Papa Bell, Negro League outfielder; Hall of Famer (b. 1903) Cool Papa Bell (Baseball Hall of Famers of the Negro Leagues), by Shaun McCormack, Rosen Publishing Group, 2002. On this date: 1919 – Christy Mathewson, back from the World War I, rejoins the New York Giants as pitching coach […]

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Now hear this: baseball on podcasts

History

And I’m not talking about the hundreds of podcasts actually devoted to the national pastime, but a couple not normally associated with the game. Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me, the NPR (aka National Pastime Radio) news quiz show, featured San Francisco Giants announced Jon Miller in its “Not My Job” segment on the March 2 […]

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Review roundup March 6

2012 title

James Bailey posted this one about Mike Piazza’s  Long Shot. Upshot: “I was neutral on him when I began and emerged with a somewhat negative impression. That’s probably not what he was looking for. Your mileage will likely vary depending on how closely you followed his career.” Bill Jordan over at Baseball Reflections did this […]

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Don’t be a hater: a ‘Nation’s’ eyebrows raised over Piazza’s memoir

2013 title

Just finished reading Mike Piazza’s Long Shot for a review that will appear Friday on Bookreporter.com. The quick react: is it great? No. Certainly nothing like R.A Dickey’s emotionally charged Wherever I Wind Up. Piazza grew up in an affluent environment, which seems to engender some ill will of its own, silver spoon and all […]

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A new twist on a storybook cliche

"Oddballs"

Heh. From The Perry Bible Fellowship

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I always wanted a cool nickname

501 Baseball Books...

I always wanted a cool nickname. When I was manager of the Brooklyn College baseball team, it was always lazy stuff like “Kap.” When I was a softball instructor at camp in Montreal, it was “Brooks,” for Brooklyn. But NOW… Just noticed this on the spine of the book. They call me…

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The next thing you know, they’ll be including WAR on the back of baseball cards

"Oddballs"

Long gone are the days when Topps would post tiny cartoons talking about a player’s unique skill, accomplishment or hobby.       But fear not; as long as there are Jumbotrons, we’ll still be able to enjoy these gems.

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Baseball Bookshelf almanac, Feb. 25

Autobiography/memoirs

Literary birthday greetings: 1919 – Monte Irvin, outfielder; All-Star, Hall of Famer Nice Guys Finish First: The Autobiography of Monte Irvin, by Irvin and James A. Riley, Carroll & Graf, 1996. 1929 – Syd Thrift, general manager (d. 2006) The Game According to Syd: The Theories and Teachings of Baseball’s Leading Innovator, by Thrift and […]

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Authors appearances: Bergino Baseball Clubhouse

2013 title

Happy to be among those who have been invited to speak at the eclectic Clubhouse in Manhattan. I will be at the Clubhouse on Thursday, May 9, at 7 p.m. My learned colleagues include: Ira Berkow, Summers at Shea: Tom Seaver Loses His Overcoat and Other Mets Stories, Thursday, March 14 Matthew Silverman, Swinging ’73: […]

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Lest we forget: Ozzie Sweet

Lest We Forget

And so am I. Jury duty and still trying to get my day job done is taking up my blogging time, much to my (and I hope, to a degree) your dismay. But I wanted to pay tribute to one of my favorite sports photographers, Ozzie Sweet, who passed away Wednesday at the age of […]

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Happy President’s Weekend!

"Oddballs"

Sorry, but no cards for George Washington, top, who played for the Chicago White Sox from 1935-36, or Ezra Lincoln, below, who split his one big league season in 1890 between the Cleveland Spiders and Syracuse Stars.    

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Bits and pieces

"Oddballs"

The best way to play catch-up is via a “Bits and Pieces” entry so here goes: James Bailey offers this appreciation for W.P. Kinsella’s The Iowa Baseball Confederacy. Rob Neyer, Grant Brisbee, and Murray Chass on Mike Piazza and his new book, Long Shot. Don’t know where this excellent Simpsons/Moneyball mashup came from, but Brisbee […]

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Idle time on jury duty

"Oddballs"

Fulfilling your civic duty by serving on a jury certainly has its ups and downs. Suffice it to say I am on a case, the details of which I cannot reveal at this point, and will be shuttling back and forth to the courts for the foreseeable future. The “good news”: the schedule is such […]

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The jury is out

Because I can...

And I along with it. Yes, I’m off to do my civic duty for a couple of days, so I don’t know how often I’ll be able to update the blogs. Given the state of the judicial system, I am looking forward, however, to sitting around the jury room waiting to be picked and catching […]

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Timing is everything (or nothing at all)

2013 title

One wonders why Simon & Schuster held back the release of Mike Pizza’s new memoir, Long Shot. From Saturday’s NY Times article, written by David Waldstein: “rumors began to circulate about why the release…was being pushed back to February, a month after the voting would be concluded and the final results tabulated. Would his memoir […]

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Baseball Bookshelf almanac, Feb. 11

Anniversaries

Lest we forget: 1950 – Kiki Cuyler, outfielder; All-Star, Hall of Famer (b. 1898) Hazen “Kiki” Cuyler: A Baseball Biography, by Ronald Waldo, McFarland 2012. 2011 – Chuck Tanner, outfielder, manager (b. 1928) Chuck Tanner’s baseball playbook, by Tanner with Jim Enright, Rutledge/Mayflower Book, 1981 Also on this date: 1985 – Minnesota Twins first baseman […]

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Pass the popcorn: Uber-analyzing The Pride of the Yankees

Baseball movies

Last week I posted this entry on Tom Shieber’s frame-by-frame analysis to say “yea” or “nay” (sort of) to the urban legend that Gary Cooper’s baseball action while portraying Lou Gehrig was inverted since the actor was a natural righty (I wonder: there’s a scene where Gehrig is signing a ball for sick little Billy […]

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Francona book cracks Times’ Best Seller list

2013 title

Former Red Sox skipper Terry Francona’s self-named memoir debuts on the NY Times‘ Best Seller list at number 2. Gregory Cowles included it in the print edition of the Sunday Book Review’s “TBR: Inside the List” column. Unfortunately, it’s not on-line as of this writing so you’re own your own, since it’s too long for […]

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Lest we forget: Shelby Whitfield

Lest We Forget

Shelby Whitfield, the former play-by-play announcer for the Washington Senators who wrote Kiss it goodbye (1973), a critical book about the team’s owner in the early 1970s and later managed an all-star cast of announcers for ABC Radio, died Feb. 5 at a rehabilitation facility in Jackson, NJ. He was 77. According to Whitfield’s obituary […]

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Baseball Bookshelf almanac, Feb. 8

Autobiography/memoirs

Literary birthday greetings: 1942 – Fritz Peterson, pitcher; All-Star Mickey Mantle Is Going To Heaven, by Peterson, Outskirts Press, 2009. The Art of De-Conditioning: Eating Your Way to Heaven, by Peterson, Light Side Books, 2012. Lest we forget: 1956 – Connie Mack, catcher, manager; Hall of Famer (b. 1862) My 66 Years in the Big […]

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