So if the owners had picked Bush for commissioner, we could have avoided his presidency?

2010 title

Interesting premise. Just one of several though-provokers in Bad Sports, by Dave Zirin. Not exactly sure why a review of a two-year old book was posted on the Los Angeles Review of Books site at this time (other than the fact that it was recently released as a paperback), but here it is. And while […]

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For your viewing pleasure: Sports Illustrated‘s magazine show

2012 title

Another sports magazine show? Well, when you carry the SI imprimatur, people will pay attention. The monthly offering premieres tonight on the NBC Sports Network. One of the four segments: The Bundy Project: The development of prized Baltimore Orioles pitching prospect Dylan Bundy is quite extraordinary. He squats 500 lbs. throws a 100-mph fastball, drinks […]

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Bits and pieces

"Oddballs"

* From the Atlanta Journal Constitution, a piece on John Klima, author of a new book on the 1957 World Champion Milwaukee Braves. * Speaking of the Braves, former Atlanta catcher Javy Lopez will be signing his book, Behind the Plate: A Catcher’s View of the Braves Dynasty, at Barnes and Noble,1217 Caroline St. NE, in […]

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Review roundup, July 23

2011 title

* The New York Times published this review about Ballplayer: Pelotero, a film documentary about baseball in the Dominican Republic. Upshot: “Forget feel-good boys-of-summer tales. This film shows a shady business in which scouts and the teams they represent try to manipulate teenage players, and to some extent the players do some manipulating of their […]

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Bookshelf review: Third Base for Life

2012 title

A Memoir of Fathers, Sons, and Baseball, by Joshua L. Berkowitz. Vantage Point, 2012. One of the knocks about youth sports over the last generation of so is that every kid comes away with a trophy, at least in the early stages. It’s all about building self-esteem, cooperating with others, good sportsmanship, etc. But as […]

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What once was lost, now is found

Classic title

Came across an interesting website recently: Forgottenbooks.com. I think it’s worth it to reproduce their mission statement in its entirety 1,000,000+ Free Books by Forgotten Books! You have reached the world’s largest online library of high-quality eBooks. Forgotten Books is an independent book publisher, boasting over 1,000,000 different titles, and offering all of our titles […]

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National Pastime Radio

2012 title

John Klima discusses his latest book, Bushville Wins!: The Wild Saga of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves and the Screwballs, Sluggers, and Beer Swiggers Who Canned the New York Yankees and Changed Baseball, on WUWM, Milwaukee’s NPR presence. In the “here’s something you don’t see everyday” department, author Don Spivey wants his biography on Satchel Paige […]

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Authors appearance: Oil Can Boyd and Mike Shalin

2012 title

The Whittemore Library of Naugatuck, CT, will host a book talk and signing by former Red Sox pitcher Dennis “Oil Can” Boyd and co-author Mike Shalin (They Call Me Oil Can: Baseball, Drugs, and Life on the Edge) at 1 p.m. Saturday, July 28, at the Naugatuck Congregational Church Hall.  

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Review roundup, July 20

2012 title

* The Capital Times (Madison, WI) published reviews on Daniel Levitt’s The Battle that Forged Modern Baseball: The Federal League Challenge and Its Legacy and John Klima’s Bushville Wins!: The Wild Saga of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves and the Screwballs, Sluggers, and Beer Swiggers Who Canned the New York Yankees and Changed Baseball. Upshot, former […]

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Lest we forget: Robert Creamer

Lest We Forget

As if to prove the fragility of life, the news about Creamer comes just days after a belated literary birthday greetings. Creamer’s obit from The New York Times and by sportswriter/editor Jack McCallum.

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More ‘Who’s on First’ breakdowns

2012 title

Slate’s Hang Up and Listen, is one of my “must-hear” podcasts. The chatter is almost always entertaining (except when they talk about soccer. ugh.). This week one of the topics was the classic Abbot and Costello routine. Coming on the heals of the Seinfeld-Costas deconstruction aired last week on the MLB Network, I have to […]

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

2012 title

One of the good things about having a Kindle or Nook is the ability to read sample of a book before buying. Makes sense; if you were at a bookstore, you’d probably leaf through at least a few pages (although I once read an entire book over the course of a few lunch hours. That’s […]

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(Belated) Literary birthday greetings: Robert Creamer

Baseball in war time

The author of the classic Babe: The Legend Comes to Life, as well as other highly praised baseball titles (Baseball in ’41: A Celebration of the “Best Baseball Season Ever” and Stengel: His Life and Times) turned 90 on Saturday. Baseball: Past and Present posted this interview with Creamer earlier this year.

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For your viewing pleasure: The Franchise

2012 title

Saw the first episode of Showtime’s The Franchise last night. Not much to say, really. The focus was Ozzie Guillen (who was suspended early on for his remarks about Fidel Castro), closer Heath Bell’s  woes, and the team’s overall ups and downs over the first three months of the season. (Warning: the program contains lots […]

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For your viewing pleasure: Costas & Seinfeld: Who’s on First?

2012 title

With the All-Star break an extra day longer this year, the MLB Network had to find something to fill the time usually taken up with endless repeats of the same information. So they premiered Costas & Seinfeld: Who’s on First?, a deconstruction of the classic comedy routine. The Seinfeld fan will recall the two-part episode […]

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It must be true; I read it in the Times

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The New York Times ran a couple of interesting pieces in the July 8 issue. (Yeah, I know I’m late, so sue me.) * Tyler Kepner wrote, “The 83F project: Sign here, please,” about one man’s attempt to have his entire 1983 Fleer card set signed by the subjects, all 660 of them. he’s 99 […]

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The ‘waiting room’ to the Hall

2012 title

The 2012 Hall of Fame inductions are just around the corner and this is the time of year the sportswriters and fans jump on their soapboxes to rail against the perceived injustices against those players who just fall outside the voters’ foul lines.  Organizations such as The Baseball Reliquary thumb their collective noses by host […]

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Too smart for me

Classic title

I often wonder why some of our most intellectual writers would want to do baseball. Perhaps, as Star Trek‘s Mr. Spock said in the episode “Shore Leave” (Geek alert!), “The more complex the mind, the greater the need for play.” So when a George Will or a Tom Olpihant or a Doris Kearns Goodwin starts […]

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Choosing The Chosen

Classic title

Jacqueline Cutler at the Star-Ledger published this piece on the Chaim Potok novel. This slips under a lot of folks’ radar. Say what you will about the author (many years ago I worked with S.L. Schneiderman, a charming gentleman who translated AJCongress press releases for the Yiddish press), who knew him and loved to opine […]

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All-Star reading

2011 title

Maybe it’s just the sports new cycles, but it seems there was a lot of emphasis on how young many of this year’s All-Stars were, juxtaposed with Chipper Jones, who is probably making his last appearance in the summer classic. (Did anyone else think his locker room “pep talk” was uncomfortable and stagey?) It occurred […]

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