Because I’m all about the veterans…

Baseball in war time

If this doesn’t bring a lump to your throat, then you have no soul. Either scripts and active content are not permitted to run or Adobe Flash Player version10.0.0 or greater is not installed.

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Shameless self-promotion: The 501 project UPDATED

501 Baseball Books...

Just an update about my forthcoming book, 501 Books Baseball Fans Must Read Before They Die. I starting to believe this thing is really going to happen. Received the copyedited manuscript and am going through it a couple of times, for language edits and to fill in a couple of citation questions, etc. And the […]

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Suit up* (updated)

Because I can...

A recent episode of Suits had as its “B” plot a defamation suit between an ESPN-type broadcaster and the baseball player he accused of using steroids. As with most of the episode of this intriguing show, “Asterisk” has a primary plot that shares a connection. One of the weaselly characters is put up for a […]

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I will be brief: A sampling of baseball e-books

2012 title

Conducted my semi-regular scan of new titles. Submitted for your interest. It may seem unfair, but I do tend to judge e-books by their cover, especially when they are offered only in that format. It’s an indication of the time and effort the author/publisher puts into the project. Similarly, I’m basing my opinions strictly on […]

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Review roundup, Aug. 22

2011 title

♦ From the Tulsa World, this on on Robert Fitts’ Banzai Babe Ruth: Baseball, Espionage, and Assassination during the 1934 Tour of Japan. Upshot: “It is very well-researched and a balanced account, but it occasionally threatens to sag under the weight of such details. Readers need not be fans of baseball to appreciate the sport […]

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Move over, Natinals; here come the Angees

"Oddballs"

Remember this? Well, now there’s this:  

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Mental Floss quiz: Who has more hits than Derek Jeter

Magazines

I will always have a soft spot for Mental Floss, the publication that assigned me my first cover story (which you can read here from a very early attempt at a website. I’m amazed it’s still available.) So here’s their latest baseball quiz, with Jeter as the focus. I missed four of the 11 players […]

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He Kent stay away from the spotlight

2012 title

Former MLB second baseman Jeff Kent will be one of the contestants on the new season of Survivor, which begins Spet. 19. I still won’t watch this show.

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You know there’s a book in this down the line (Roger Clemens)

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

“Clemens Headed Back to Baseball—at 50“

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Still looking for the great American baseball novel?

2012 title

Gary Perilloux posted this essay on Full Spectrum Baseball in which he argues that Joseph M. Schuster’s The Might Have Been: A Novel “may just be the Greatest American Baseball Novel ever written. Period.” Discuss.  

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Talkin’ baseball: A roundup of interviews

2012 title

♦ The Louisville Courier-Journal posted this Q&A with Katya Cengel, author of Bluegrass Baseball: A Year in the Minor League Life. ♦ Tom Hoffarth of the Los Angeles Daily News, blogged about Not Exactly Cooperstown, a documentary about The Baseball Reliquary by Jon Leonoudakis (look for a review of the film as well as a […]

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“Putting on the shvitz” (Baseball and gobal warming)

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Years ago I wrote a piece for E, The Environmental Magazine about how some Major League teams were getting on the “green” wagon, recycling, cutting back on water usage, etc. I kept hoping to return to the topic, but this piece by Elliott Negin, Director of News & Commentary, Union of Concerned Scientists, on the […]

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Review roundup, Aug. 17

2011 title

♦ The Summer 2012 issue of Jewish Currents features a review by Cynthia Werthamer of Pitching in the Promised Land: A Story of the First and Only Season in the Israel Baseball League, by former IBL hurler Aaron Pribble. Upshot: “While Pribble’s book could do with less foreshadowing…, his retelling of the ups and downs […]

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Bookshelf review: The American Diamond

Business of baseball

A Documentary of the Game of Baseball, by Branch Rickey with Robert Riger. Simon and Schuster, 1965. I discovered this gem on the Facebook “Baseball Book” Group. Had I known about this beforehand, I probably would have included it in my forthcoming 501 Books Baseball Fans Must Read Before They Die. Rickey, who served in […]

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What the well-dressed player is not wearing

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

(Because you can put your baseball bracelets on a bookshelf.) R.A. Dickey, the best player on the NY Mets right now and one of the best pitchers in the Majors, might be forgiven for losing a bit of concentration in yesterday’s 6-1 loss to the Cincinnati Reds. In an age where ballplayers wear their uniform […]

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Mr. Postman delivers my manuscript (501 update)

2013 title

Actually, it was Mr. Federal Express Man. Received the penultimate revision of my manuscript back from the University of Nebraska Press. All nicely formatted and awaiting my overview and approval. Very cool. I have three weeks to get it back. I assume the next step would be settling on graphic elements, then creating the index. […]

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On the horizon: Upcoming baseball titles

2012 title

Or “Coming soon to a bookstore near you.” As mentioned in the previous post about e-books, I occasionally scan Amazon to see what baseball titles are coming down the pike. Here is a list of those scheduled for release before the end of the year that seem particularly interesting. As usual, the literate baseball fan […]

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I will be brief: A sampling of baseball e-books

2012 title

Conducted my semi-regular scan of new titles. Submitted for your interest. It may seem unfair, but I do tend to judge e-books by their cover, especially when they are offered only in that format. It’s an indication of the time and effort the author/publisher puts into the project. Similarly, I’m basing my opinions strictly on […]

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Review roundup, Aug. 14

2012 title

♦ Bleacher Report posted this one about Golden Boys: Baseball Portraits, 1946-1960 by the late Andy Jurinko. Upshot: “Seldom does a book come around that can boast about being magnificently illustrated as well as historically captivating, let alone a book based on the Golden Age of baseball.” ♦  SouthBendTribune.com posted this review of Andre Dawson’s […]

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Bookshelf review: Sandy Koufax: Strikeout King

Biography

by Arnold Hano. G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1964. After reading his classic A Day In The Bleachers and interviewing him for a Bookshelf podcast, I was thrilled to find this little gem available through my local library coop. What makes Sandy Koufax: Strikeout King interesting is the fact that it was published before his famous decision […]

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