The best baseball books? A Sports Illustrated perspective

Biography

While doing research for my project, I came across this list, published in 2002, of the 100 top sports books of all time as chosen by the editors of Sports Illustrated. Of those 100, “only” 32 were about baseball. The nerve. Anyway, here’s the SI piece, trimmed to just baseball titles, with commentary from the […]

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Author honors: Paul Dickson

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Dickson, author of several outstanding books on the game, not the least of which is his eponymous Baseball Dictionary, was recently honored at an event sponsored by the Baseball Reliquary. While Robert Alomar, Bert Blyleven, and Pat Gillick were in Cooperstown last weekend, the Reliquary was having an “induction day” of its own in southern […]

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Beach reading, continued

Classic title

Allen Barra, author of several notable baseball titles himself, offers this list of top five baseball fiction titles, including: Ring Around the Bases, by Ring Lardner Sometimes You See It Coming, by Kevin Baker The Brothers K, by David James Duncan Squeeze Play, by Jane Leavy (author of The Last Boy and Sandy Koufax: A […]

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Bookshelf review: Induction Day at Cooperstown

2011 title

A History of the Baseball Hall of Fame Ceremony, by Dennis Corcoran. McFarland, 2011. In honor of today’s Happy Day for Roberto Alomar, Bert Blyleven, and Pat Gillick… There are plenty of books that analyze Hall of Fame elections and debate the merit of those who made it versus those who didn’t, but this is […]

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Bookshelf Review: The Greatest Game Ever Pitched

2011 title

Juan Marichal, Warren Spahn, and the Pitching Duel of the Century, by Jim Kaplan. Triumph Books, 2011. Note: This review appears on Bookreporter.com. These days, a manager is thrilled if he can get a “quality start” out of a pitcher: six innings with no more than three earned runs. Gone are the days of 25 […]

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The pen is mightier than the baseball

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

but the difference in weight and shape can mess up your ceremonial first pitch, as we see here for former Major Leaguer and current author Doug Glanville.

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All you need is the Benny Hill music

"Oddballs"

They never show fans running on to the field because they don’t want to encourage that sort of behavior, but sometimes it can be more entertaining than the actual game. Originally from Sports Illustrated‘s Extra Mustard blog: “A fan ran onto the field during last night’s Cardinals-Mets game. The takedown stinks, but the key here […]

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Bits and pieces

"Oddballs"

Because, why not? Baseball Reflections posted this review of David Halberstam‘s October 1964, one of several baseball books from the author of “more important” works. Upshot:”This work is one of the most in depth looks at the behind the scenes make-up of a World Series match-up that has ever been written. While certainly not a […]

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Now hear this / National Pastime Radio

2011 title

Combining two themes here to bring you some recent podcasts. * Craig Robinson, author of the new Flip Flop Fly Ball: An Infographic Baseball Adventure (See all Humor Books), was on the July 19 edition of Slate’s Hang Up and Listen. There are several excellent questions about Robinson’s though processes as he comes up with […]

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Beach reading, part 1

2011 title

The first of what will probably be several lists/suggestions: Linda Holmes, over at Monkey See, the pop culture blog for NPR, offered a selection of five sports books for the summer, including Stan Musial: An American Life by George Vecsey. And, what the heck, there’s enough info to consider Scorecasting a baseball book, too. This […]

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“It’s a sad story.” The fall and fall of Lenny Dykstra

Player-written book

Harvey Araton published this piece on “Nails” in today’s New York Times. One of the failed projects the ex-ballplayer was working on was The Player’s Club,  a magazine designed specifically for recently retired athletes. Suffice it to say that it never really got off the ground. I’m almost willing to bet that Dykstra has AADD. […]

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Literary blasts from the past, July 20

Hall of Fame

From the Baseball-Reference.com Bullpen: San Francisco’s Gaylord Perry connects for his first Major League homer, to beat the Dodgers, 7 – 3. The previous year, Giants’ manager Alvin Dark had remarked that “They’ll put a man on the moon before he hits a home run.” Perry’s homer comes about 20 minutes after the club house […]

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What I’m doing on my summer vacation (Part II)

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Took the first part of the vacation last week to work on the book. The next section comes up at the beginning of August as we travel to Boston. We’ll be taking in the Friday night Yankees-Red Sox game (trying to convince my daughter to leave the Jeter jersey at home). But while tooling around […]

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He said, he said

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Dan Gutman has created a series of pretty good kids’ books with the premise of a boy who can travel back through time to meet some of the greatest players in the game, among them Honus Wagner, Mickey Mantle, Shoeless Joe Jackson, and Babe Ruth, among others. Now, I don’t know the whole story here, […]

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For Black Sox, new twist on an old story

2011 title

Kelly D. Cleaver Sr. recently published Sorry Kid, I Don’t Much Feel Like Playing Today which, according to the blurb on the iUniverse publishing site, “settles the debates once and for all by breaking down each player’s contributions on a play-by-play basis. Section one addresses Chicago’s pitching and fielding, while section two is all about […]

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Back to bidness

2011 title

Well, that week off didn’t go exactly as I’d hoped. I really expected to get a lot more done vis-a-vis 501Baseball Books. A trip to the main branch of the NY Public Library turned out to be disappointing although going into the city did give me the opportunity to spend some time with Jay Goldberg, […]

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Author appearance: Robert Lipsyte

2011 title

The award-winning sportswriter for The New York Times, will discuss the sports culture and his career experiences — which actually began with an eventful meeting with Mickey Mantle —- followed by a signing of his memoir, An Accidental Sportswriter, at the Yogi Berra Museum tomorrow (July 16) at 5:30. Books available for purchase at the […]

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The melody lingers on

Lest We Forget

Richard Sandomir published this appreciation of Ruth Roberts, composer of “Meet The Mets” and a couple of other baseball ditties, who died on June 30.

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Bookshelf review: Baseball and Memory

2011 title

Winning, Losing, and the Remembrance of Things Past, by Lee Congdon. St. Augustine’s Press I’m not going to spend a lot of time on this one. A) I’m on vacation and working as much as possible on my own project, and B) I was fairly disappointed with the book. When I scanned the upcoming titles […]

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Bookshelf review: Pitching in a Pinch

Classic title

By Christy Mathewson, 1912 A “pinch” is a tight spot, when one is expected to suck it up and give it that extra 10 percent; Mathewson had to do that a time or two in an era when starting pitchers were expected to go the distance. Hard to believe that Mathewson, one of the original […]

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