Because who wouldn’t want Ted Williams memorabilia on their bookshelf?

collectibles

Forbes reported that there’s going to a whole lot of Splendid Splinter items coming up for auction. The event will take place on Saturday, April 28, at Fenway (where else?) under the auspices of Hunt Auctions., Inc. Among the effects: Lots 1-31 Contemporary pieces including autographed materials. Lots 32-59 Early career and Red Sox related. […]

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Let’s take a breath, people (Matt Kemp)

baseball statistical theory

  Matt Kemp has had a wonderful start: Six home runs in the Dodgers’ first 10 games, as well as 16 RBIs, and a BA/OBP/SLG line of .487/.523/1.026. But someone has to be a bit more ambitious, or at least less lazy. ESPN projects a player’s end-of-season/162 game stats based purely on what he has […]

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Review roundup, April 17

2011 title

♦ Tom Hoffarth’s latest 30/30 entry: Ruling Over Monarchs, Giants & Stars: True Tales of Breaking Barriers, Umpiring Baseball Legends and Wild Adventures in the Negro Leagues. ♦ Only a Game host Bill Littlefield offered his thought’s on John Grisham’s Calico Joe (scroll down about half way). Upshot: “some of the baseball elements of Calico […]

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National Pastime Radio: A bonanza!

Author appearance

The airwaves sure have been busy over the past few days. ♦ Jim Abbott (Imperfect: An Improbable Life) was a guest on yesterday’s Leonard Lopate Show. I find it interesting that the subtitle does not include “Baseball,” as in “An Improbable Baseball Life.” ♦ John Grisham, author of Calico Joe  was a guest on Only […]

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Shameless self-promotion: Hofstra event celebrates Mets’ 50th

Academic/scholarly journals

The Mets are celebrating their 50th anniversary this year. One of the key events marking the occasion is a three-day conference at Hofstra University and it will be my pleasure to moderate a panel of three landsmen at an authors roundtable. The gentlemen include: ♦ John Thorn, the official historian of Major League Baseball and […]

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My new favorite baseball commercial

2012 title

Because you can keep a TV on a bookshelf: Although I actually prefer the shorter version: Love the eye-roll when the Cubs’ fan refers to the “elegantly-coiffed ex-governor.”

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Review roundup, April 16

2012 title

♦ Tom Hoffarth’s latest two entries on his 30/30 feature: The Team That Forever Changed Baseball and America: The 1947 Brooklyn Dodgers, by The Society of American Baseball Research, edited by Lyle Spatz, Maurice Bouchard and Leonard Levin, and Conspiracy of Silence: Sportswriters and the Long Campaign to Desegregate Baseball, by Chris Lamb. Upshots: Dodgers […]

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Novelist offers a chilly scenario for Ted Williams

2012 title

There was an awful lot of bizzaro “news” following the death of baseball legend Ted Williams in 2002. For those of you unfamiliar with the story, Williams’ son, Ted Jr., who, according to many accounts, was a no-account person with no discernible skills of his own who pushed his ailing dad hard in the memorabilia […]

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Jackie Robinson Day

History

‘Nuf said.

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Review roundup, April 14

2012 title

♦ The latest in Tom Hoffarth’s 30/30 feature: A People’s History of Baseball, by Mitchell Nathanson. Upshot: “The book jacket says Nathan writes with “passion and occasional outrage.” Sometimes it comes off as more bittnerness [sic] or misdirected anger. ♦ The Chicago-Sun Times posted this review of Grisham’s Calico Joe. Upshot: “In baseball terms, Calico […]

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The play’s the thing

Baseball plays/theater

It’s kind of too bad (for me) that Rob Fleder’s new book has the same name as a musical favorite that’s currently touring. Whenever I see mention of Damn Yankees, I assume it’s for the former, a collection of essays about the Bronx Bombers, but more often lately it’s about the theatrical work, which has […]

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Review roundup, April 13

2012 title

♦ The Washington Times posted this review of Paul Dickson’s new Bill Veeck bio. ♦ Baseball reflections posted this on R.A. Dickey’s Wherever I Wind Up. ♦ Tom Hoffarth’s livre-du-jour is Damn Yankees: Twenty-Four Major League Writers on the World’s Most Loved (and Hated) Team.

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The Bookshelf Podcast: Tim Wendell

2012 title

History is not supposed to be something I’ve lived through. History is supposed to be something that happened well before I was born. It was therefore with a mix of nostalgia and dread that I read Tim Wendell‘s Summer of ’68: The Season That Changed Baseball–and America–Forever. 1968 was the first year I really started […]

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Breakfast of champions

collectibles

The nickname has always been associated with the Wheaties brand, and dozens of baseball players have had their mugs plastered on the box. One that stands prominently on my bookshelf is Cal Ripken Jr. (it houses newspaper stories from his recording-breaking season). So why not have a player-specific breakfast food? This list of “11 Athletes […]

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Progam notes: Minneapolis Central Library

Baseball program

An exhibit titled, “Baseball: America’s Game,” opened Monday at Minneapolis Central Library, 300 Nicollet Mall. It features artistic contributions across multiple platforms from, among others, Bank of America Collection, the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum, Major League Baseball Productions and the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. The exhibit runs through June 15.

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More on Grisham/Calico Joe

2012 title

The author of Calico Joe is making the rounds (I hope to get him to slum a bit and grant an interview to the Bookshelf). Here he is on CBS News, opining how half his future sales will come from e-books, a signal of the decline and fall of the physical book, and, consequently, bookstores. […]

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Review roundup, April 12

2012 title

♦ Day 12 of Tom Hoffarth’s 30/30 project: R.A. Dickey’s Wherever I Wind Up: My Quest for Truth, Authenticity and the Perfect Knuckleball.  

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Authors appearance: ‘Judaism and Baseball’

Author appearance

The Isabella Freedman Jewish Retreat Center in Connecticut is holding this three-day event from June 29-July 1. Among the authors and media personalities scheduled to appear: Martin Abramowitz—President of Jewish Major Leaguers, Inc, the producers of Jewish baseball cards Rabbi Rebecca Alpert—Associate Professor, Temple University; author of Out of Left Field: Jews and Black Baseball […]

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(Baseball) Books of the Times

Lists

In honor of opening week, The New York Times posted this piece in its Arts Beat blog in which several of their writers and editors pick their favorite baseball titles. Among them: George Vecsey, The Southpaw and The Boys of Summer Michiko Kakutani, Chief Book Critic, Underworld Tyler Kepner, Ball Four and Men at Work […]

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Bookshelf Review: Turning Two

2012 title

Turning Two: My Journey to the Top of the World and Back with the New York Mets, by Bud Harrelson with Phil Pepe. Thomas Dunne Books, 2012. Harrelson’s new book is a bit a throwback. One could easily imagine reading this in the pre-Ball Four era. Other than a scant mention of disappointment for the […]

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