And while I’m at it — The Art of Fielding

2011 title

TAOF is now in paperback, so I guess it’s time for another round of fawning articles. (I found it interesting when I saw it at my local Barnes and Noble: there was a “sticker” on the cover that declared: A New York Times Book review BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR It has obviously been designed […]

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Surprise, surprise — Calico Joe hits the Times bestseller list

2012 title

John Grisham’s Calico Joe was number one on The New York Times Bestseller list two weeks ago; now it’s number three, (It has been explained to that the list as printed in  the Sunday book supplement is two weeks behind the on-line version, but I can’t say it makes much sense to me.) Needless to […]

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Another “dying profession” / Baseball art

2012 title

Sheesh, what’s going to be left? The New York Times sports media writer Richard Sandomir wrote this story about sports cartoonists joining the endangered species list last week. In my attic I have pages torn from the NY Daily News from 1969, when Bruce Stark drew a series of Mets, including Gil Hodges, Tom Seaver, […]

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National Pastime Radio

2012 title

And the hits just keep coming. Recent author interviews on NPR programs include: This Q&A with Jim Bouton, was the guest for a segment on “‘Ball Four’: The Book That Changed Baseball,” from Northwest Public Radio (an NPR “double threat”). Hart Seely, author of The Juju Rules: Or, How to Win Ballgames from Your Couch: A […]

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Review roundup, May 4

2012 title

Not much today, boys and girls. ♦ BosoxInjection, a Red Sox-centric blog, posted this review of Extra Innings, Bruce Spitzer’s novel about the “reanimation” of Ted Williams in the year 2092. ♦ The Washington Times offers this review of Calico Joe.  Upshot: “With Father’s Day approaching, “Calico Joe” is a book guaranteed to make Pop […]

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Last week in Sports Illustrated

2012 title

Ben Reiter wrote this piece on the newest hot team in baseball, the Washington Nationals, while Tom Verducci provides this on Phil Humber’s perfect game.

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Review roundup, May 3

2012 title

♦ I don’t usually look at e-books if they haven’t been published on paper as well, but David H. Martinez (The Book of Baseball Literacy: 3rd Edition: Nearly 700 People, Places, Events, Teams, Stats, and Stories – Everything You Need to Know in One Massive Book) has enough of a track record for me to […]

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An interesting buyer of Ted Williams memorabilia

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

According to a Facebook post by Tim Wiles of the Baseball Hall of Fame Library, New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees, who bid by phone in this weekends Ted Williams auction, bought Ted Williams’s World War II and Korean War flight log books for $35,600 and planned to send them to The National World War […]

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You could keep these on your bookshelf…

"Oddballs"

but not for very long: Chocolate-covered strawberries. Yum.  

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Review roundup, May 2

2012 title

♦ Recently “discovered” At Home Plate, a nice little baseball site that posts the occasional review. Recent titles include Long Taters: A Baseball Biography of George “Boomer” Scott The Greatest Minor League: A History of the Pacific Coast league, 1903-1957 Hit By Pitch: Ray Chapman, Carl Mays, and the Fatal Fastball Wherever I Wind Up: […]

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Review roundup, May 1

2012 title

♦ The Oklahoman reviewed R.A. Dickey’s memoir. Upshot: “This isn’t just a book about baseball. It’s a book, as Dickey often said, about hope. Hope of attaining his dream. Hope of being happy. Hope of proving people wrong about being a knuckleball pitcher. How he reaches each point of hope is an incredible journey, and […]

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Lest we forget: Moose Skowron

Because I can...

No, the player born William Joseph Skowron was not Jewish, but there is a Jewish connection, no matter how tenuous. Skowron, a resident of Chicago, was a guest on Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me, the NPR news quiz show hosted by landsman Peter Sagal. Long story short, Skowron said some things that sounded so detailed […]

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Review roundup, April 30, Part 2

2012 title

♦ Bill Jordan posted this review of Paul Dickson’s Bill Veeck: Baseball’s Greatest Maverick, on Baseball Reflections. Upshot: “Anyone who considers themselves to be a fan of baseball history should pick this work up. Whether you were familiar with Veeck or not before reading the book, you stand to learn a lot about this interesting […]

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Review roundup, April 30, Part One

2012 title

This deserves an entry all of its own. The last books in Tom Hoffarth’s 30/30 feature include: Willie Mays Aikens: Safe at Home, by Gregory Jordan. Upshot: Hoffarth’s title for the piece — Aiken’s journey from a prison sentence to a whole lot of paragraphs, correctly punctuated — belies his wrap, in which he describes […]

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Back from Hofstra, back to business

Author appearance

Spent a pleasant three days at Hofstra University’s conference celebrating the 50th anniversary of the New York Mets, much on on which later. Suffice it so say here that I met or re-meta lot of nice folks, many of whom are authors and/or bloggers, including my roomie, Matthew Silverman (several titles about the Mets), Stanley […]

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Review roundup, April 24

2012 title

♦ Tom Hoffarth’s latest 30/30: Extra Innings: More Baseball Between the Numbers from the Team at Baseball Prospectus, edited by Steven Goldman, editor-in-chief of BaseballProspectus.com. Upshot: “The top-qualify writing, and heavy-duty thinking, you’ve come to expect from the Prospectus staff is worthy of this heavy-duty bounded hardback (no more paperbacks this time around). The stuff […]

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It’s a mag mag mag mag world

2012 title

Well, maybe just two mags. South Jersey Magazine ran this cover-story profile on the Phillies’ new closer, Jonathon Paplebon. And with the Hofstra University program on the Mets rapidly approaching, the April 30 cover of  New York Magazine teased with a refer to what turns out to be a very small item about the team’s […]

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Now hear this: More baseball author podcasts

2011 title

These come from the New Books Network which features news on several different genres, including sports. These two, both by Bruce Berglund, feature interviews with Robert Fitts, author of Banzai Babe Ruth: Baseball, Espionage, and Assassination during the 1934 Tour of Japan; Lee Congdon, author of Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and Remembrances of Things […]

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Review roundup, April 23

2012 title

♦ The Knoxville News published this review of native son R.A. Dickley’s Wherever I Wind Up. Upshot: “t is rare to find a baseball book by an insider that dishes no dirt. It is even rarer to find a professional athlete willing to acknowledge his own mistakes. In “Wherever I Wind Up,” R.A. Dickey reveals […]

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The Bookshelf Podcast: Phil Pepe

2012 title

Any middle-aged, self-respecting New York baseball fan knows the name Phil Pepe. He was the Yankees beat writer for the World Telegram & Sun from 1961-64, and for the Daily News from 1971-84. He’s enjoyed a long run on radio, too, serving as the sports voice for WCBS-FM when it was still an oldies station, […]

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