Bookshelf Reviews: The Yankee Way and Charlie Hustle

2024 title

Sort of. These both appeared recently on Bookreporter.com: The Yankee Way: The Untold Inside Story of the Brian Cashman Era, by Andy Martino Charlie Hustle: The Rise and Fall of Pete Rose, and the Last Glory Days of Baseball, by Keith O’Brien.

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The Rabbit Hole: Neal McDonough

Baseball in movies

I was flipping through the dial (as it were) yesterday — Memorial Day — and came across the final episode of Band of Brothers. In the final scene, the men of Easy Company are playing baseball. Having watched BoB dozens of times, I knew the actor playing catcher was Neal McDonough, who played Buck Compton. […]

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Dust to dust

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

Apropos of the previous post… A member of the Baseball Books group on Facebook posted about The Complete Handbook of Baseball, one of those paperbacks that would come out every spring. I countered with my run of these guys (representative photo). These had team profiles with mini-bios of each club’s major contributors; some editions preceding […]

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Re-reading, a quick take

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

So why do we keep books? Sure there are many reasons, such as reference books that can be used over and over. One of my favorite TV lines comes from an episode of M*A*S*H in which Hawkeye talks about his favorite book. “The dictionary. I figure it’s got all the other books in it.” Like […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, May 17, 2024

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A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, May 10, 2024

2023 title

A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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Maybe it was a good thing

Television

Did you know that they were supposed to turn Field of Dreams into a series on Peacock? Neither did I until I read this article. But if past is prelude, maybe it’s a good thing that the project was scrapped. I mean, look at the small screen versions of Ball Four, The Bad News Bears, […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, May 3, 2024

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A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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The Bookshelf Conversations #178: Kevin Baker

"Bookshelf Conversations"

Take two. Don’t know what happened, but the original post from earlier this week disappeared like a Doc Gooden curveball. Not even a draft of it, so I’m trying to recreate it as faithfully as possible. It seems to many outside the area that New Yorkers have an inflated image of themselves (at least those […]

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Lest We Forget: Paul Auster

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

It’s funny, isn’t it, the things that change our lives? Novelist Paul Auster, who passed away on Tuesday at the age of 77, may have owed his career to baseball. From The Guardian: The author was born in Newark, New Jersey, in 1947. According to Auster, his writing life began at the age of eight […]

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You could keep this on your bookshelf, but I wouldn’t recommend it

"Oddballs"

Passover is over. Inevitably, we buy too many boxes of matzo and the question then becomes, what do you do with the leftovers? Sure, you can eat this stuff all year round, but would you really want to? I suppose I could ship it off to Alex Bregman…  

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Baseball Best-Sellers, April 26, 2024

2023 title

A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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It is high. It is far. It is…a book about John Sterling

2024 title

So is this a new trend in book publishing? When Ken Holtzman passed away last week, I noted that a book had been published about him immediately after he died. Recently, long-time Yankee announcer John Sterling announced his retirement. Since it’s not unusual for a team broadcaster to published his memoirs, I went to Amazon […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, April 19, 2024

2023 title

A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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Lest We Forget: Carl Erskine, Whitey Herzog, Ken Holtzman

Autobiography/memoirs

Wow, it’s been a rough few days. First Fritz Peterson, now a trio of notables, for different reasons. I’ve never seen anything like this on the obituary page of The New York Times‘ website:   Carl Erskine, the last of “the boys of summer,” died Tuesday at the age of 97. “Oisk” was a mainstay […]

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Lest We Forget: Fritz Peterson

Autobiography/memoirs

I’ve may have mentioned a project I’m working on: collecting obituaries of ballplayers that have appeared in The New York Times with the notion of how a player is identified in the opening lines. Here’s what Bruce Weber had to say in today’s edition, which had a “refer” on the front page. Fritz Peterson, who […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, April 12, 2024

"Annuals"

A reminder: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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Bits and Pieces, April 10, 2024

2020 title

♦  As we celebrated the 50th anniversary of Hank Aaron’s breaking the all-time home run record, I’m kind of surprised he hadn’t already had a stamp issued in his honor. ♦  Emily Nemens, author of The Cactus League: A Novel, wrote “On the All-But-Invisible Role of Interpreters, in Literature and in Baseball” for Lithub.com. I […]

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Lest We Forget: Jerry Grote

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I look at the ages of these guys on Baseball-Reference and they’re all well into their 70s and 80s now. Where has the time gone? Jerry Grote, the backbone behind the plate for the Miracle Mets, passed away Sunday at the age of 81. Here’s his obituary by Richard Goldstein in The New York Times. […]

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Seems like only yesterday

2024 title

It can’t possibly be fifty years since Hank Aaron broke Babe Ruth’s all-time home run record. I vividly remember watching it on TV and being amazed that they halted the game to celebrate. There were a number of books about Aaron that came out after he broke the record but here are a couple of […]

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