Because you can put these on and near your bookshelf

collectibles

Baseball Nation has a neat regular feature that I’m only just now starting to pay attention to: the eBay item of the day. Since these seem to fall into the realm of collectibles, they fit on a bookshelf (or in close proximity). Today’s offerings: vintage Milwaukee Braves coasters and a cool wall clock based on […]

Read the full article →

Lingua Francona

2013 title

Just received Francona: The Red Sox Years. Hope it’s better than the last couple managerial memoirs (Tony LaRussa, Joe Torre). One person who’s evidently looking forward to reading it is current Red Sox outfielder Ryan Kalish. As per the Boston Herald, “I absolutely plan on reading it,” Kalish told the Track. “I’m 2 1⁄2 books […]

Read the full article →

Does the Pope pop in the batting cage?

"Oddballs"

I don’t believe this for a minute, but it’s kind of funny. “He plays on a softball league at the Vatican” ??? Get him on The Yankles! Hey, if Ghandi could play, why not the Pope?

Read the full article →

Lest we forget: Earl Weaver

Uncategorized

The Hall of Fame manager of the Baltimore Orioles during their greatest years, died Saturday while on a fantasy cruise sponsored by the team. he was 82. It’s kind of sad that he passed away the same day as Stan Musial; he should have received a day all of his own for people to pay […]

Read the full article →

Lest we forget: Stan Musial

Biography

The news cycle being what it is, this will probably be a moot point by the time you many of you read this, but the opening page of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch website is full of stories, videos, and photos of Stan Musial, who passed away yesterday at the age of 92. Here’s the New […]

Read the full article →

Bookshelf review: Sophomore Campaign

2012 title

by Frank Nappi, 2012, Skyhorse. Nappi continues the story of 18-year-old pitching sensation toiling for the 1949 minor league Milwaukee Brewers, whom he introduced in his 2008 publication, The Legend of Mickey Tussler.` If Tussler doesn’t have many the problems associated with a youngster trying to fit in with a group of older men in […]

Read the full article →

Review roundup, Jan. 17

2012 title

Won’t you come home, James Bailey? After a considerable absence from the blogosphere, Bailey returns to critique action with reviews on One Patch of Grass (upshot: “The champions and the cellar dwellers all get their due in One Patch of Grass, whether in the longer “innings” chapters or in the dozens of sidebars, charts, and […]

Read the full article →

A look at the craft

2013 title

I love a good behind-the-scenes story, so I’m looking forward to Life From The Press Box: Recollections of a Sportswriter, by Jim Street, who has covered the Oakland As, Seattle Mariners, and San Francisco Giants, among non-baseball sports. The book got a nice write-up from T.R. Sullivan at MLB.com, who states, “This baseball book is […]

Read the full article →

Veeck bio wins CASEY Award

2012 title

Spitball Magazine has selected Paul Dickson’s Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick as the winner of the 2012 CASEY Award for Best Baseball Book of the Year. Veeck received two first-place votes and one third-place vote, for a near perfect score of five points (low score wins). According to CASEY judge Jack Griener, a Cincinnati attorney and […]

Read the full article →

Say it isn’t so, Youk!

2010 title

Aside from his distinguishing hair style (or lack thereof), Kevin Youkilis is know for having one of the most unique batting stances in the history of the game. Or at least he did. Seems he’s going to tinker with it a bit for his new Yankees team, much to the chagrin of the personality known […]

Read the full article →

As if Koufax needed the extra recognition

"Oddballs"

(Because this looks like a sticker, and you can put stickers on your bookcase, although I wouldn’t recommend it; they ruin the finish when you try to remove them.) The Internet Baseball Writers Association of America, of which I am a proud lifetime member, just released its new logo: Students of the game will recognize […]

Read the full article →

Another manager heard from

2013 title

Former manager Terry Francona will release his new memoir Francona: The Red Sox Years next week. Book publicity seems to be like movie trailers. The excerpts include the most exciting bits, which maybe just just a tiny fraction of the overall project. An excerpt of the book will appear in this week’s Sports Illustrated. The […]

Read the full article →

People of the (baseball) book: Jewish-themed titles/authors

2011 title

Some recent news about Jewish authors and their baseball output. Lawrence Ruttman publishes American Jews and America’s Game:Voices of a Growing Legacy in Baseball, from University of Nebraska Press, this spring. UNP is the same outfit that’s releasing my (shameless plug) 501 Baseball Books Fans Must Read before They Die. I met Ruttman, a New […]

Read the full article →

And if you believe that, I have a bridge I’m looking to sell.

2009 title

Or “Methinks he doth protest too much.” I feel sorry for a lot of today’s celebrities, especially athletes. After years of (self?) denial, Lance Armstrong admitted he used performance enhancing drugs. Ballplayer after ballplayer swears on a stack of bibles that he’s clean, only to have the evidence turn out to prove him “misstating.” The […]

Read the full article →

Swung on and missed

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

As in I missed posting this earlier. So how’s Peter Rose looking now, given the latest Hall of Fame debacle? Perhaps in an attempt to bring him back into the spotlight, he and his family are the subject of a new reality TV series, Pete Rose, Hits & Mrs., which airs Sunday nights on The […]

Read the full article →

Ouchies.

"Oddballs"

In 1991, I “auditioned” for a new softball team. I had been playing slow pitch/arc in town but had become a bit bored, so when some old friends from Brooklyn told me about their fast-pitch team in Freehold, I thought I’d give it a shot. In the first at bat of the first day of […]

Read the full article →

And the winner is…

2012 title

The Golden Globes doesn’t have a category for books, but if it did I bet Paul Dickson’s Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick would be in contention. As it is, Dickson’s bio was named winner of the 2nd annual SLA (Special Libraries Association) Baseball Caucus Readers’ Choice Award.

Read the full article →

Babe Ruth: Champion of the oppressed?

2013 title

Dec. 22 marked the 70 anniversary of an advertisement than ran in The New York Times and several other newspapers calling on men and women of German ancestry to join in a campaign denouncing the Nazi regime. The advertisement, which was sponsored by the World Jewish Congress, began At this season in which we celebrate […]

Read the full article →

501 Q&A with Marty Appel

501 Baseball Books...

Marty Appel is one of those guys who seems to have his finger in every pie. He has worked as the PR director for the New York Yankees, established his own public relations empire, and co-authored or written more than 30 books.Two of those — Now Pitching for the Yankees: Spinning the News for Mickey, […]

Read the full article →

Here’s hoping 42 doesn’t wind up in Trouble

2012 title

I don’t often buy Entertainment Weekly. I usually permit myself an issue or two a year, including the “Best and Worst of” issues. Trouble With the Curve, which seemed to go from screen to DVD with amazing speed, was deemed #5 on the list of the worst movies of 2012. According to Lisa Schwarzbaum, We’ve […]

Read the full article →
script type="text/javascript"> var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-5496371-4']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })();