Bookshelf reviews: Extra Innings and The Card

2011 title

As long-time readers of the Bookshelf know, I feel awkward when it comes to reviewing fiction. It’s so subjective. I like dogs and you’re a cat person or I like vanilla and you can’t stand it. I’m also of a mind that if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything (although that philosophy kind […]

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Literary blasts from the past: The Splendid Splinter and Stan the Man

2011 title

On this date: In 1941 at the All-Star Game at Briggs Stadium, Ted Williams, hitting .405 at the break, homers off Chicago Cubs P Claude Passeau with two out and two on in the ninth inning to give the American League a dramatic 7 – 5 victory. (Relevant title: The Midsummer Classic: The Complete History […]

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Glanville appreciates Jeter’s accomplishment

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Who better than a fellow athlete to appreciate what it takes to make it to a milestone? Doug Glanville, author of The Game from Where I Stand: A Ballplayer’s Inside View, wrote this piece for The New York Times.

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Lest we forget: Dick Williams

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The Hall of Fame manager died today at the age of 82. UPDATE: Richard Goldstein’s obituary for Williams in today’s NY Times. Williams won back-to-back World Championships with the Oakland As in 1972-73. He also led the Boston Red Sox to their “Impossible Dream” pennant in 1967 in his first year as a manager at […]

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I am absolutely watching this show

2011 title

As I mentioned recently, HBO will air a documentary on Curt Flood on July 13. That same night, Showtime will launch its new series, The Franchise: A Season with the San Francisco Giants. You can watch a “full episode preview” here (although a disclaimer on the site says it has been edited from its “original […]

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Now hear (and see) this: Shawn Green

2011 title

In this video, courtesy Simon and Schuster, Green talks about his new book, The Way of Baseball: Finding Stillness at 95 MPH. You can read an excerpt of the book here.

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Send in the Docs: A musical assessment of the Mets situation

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

(Because you can put sheet music on your bookshelf.) So first they said that Jose Reyes had sustained a hamstring injury in Saturday’s game and we held our collective breath. Then they said it was a Grade One, the “best” kind of that injury you can have. He’d miss the Sunday game and, given the […]

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Where’s the Jurges book?

"Oddballs"

If Bernard Malamud’s The Natural was supposedly based on the shooting of Eddie Waitkus, where’s a similar volume on Billy Jurges? On this date in 1932 — 17 years before the Waitkus incident —  Jurges, a 24-year-old playing for the Cubs, was shot by a “deranged” fan who threatened suicide and but for his lunging […]

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So how quickly can we make money off of this?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

As of this writing, Derek Jeter stands just four hits away from the magical 3,000. ESPN is working on Derek Jeter 3K, a  “documentary” “Set to Air Just Weeks After 3,000th Hit,” according to a press release. Can the souvenir t-shirts, caps, etc. be far behind? The name seems like a natural for a video […]

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Lest we forget: Ruth Roberts

"Oddballs"

The composer of “Meet the Mets” died June 30 at the age of 84. From the JTA’s Eulogizer blog: Ruth Roberts, 84, wrote ‘Meet the Mets’ Ruth Roberts, a popular song composer whose work was sung by millions of New York Mets fans and the Beatles, among many others, died June 30 at 84. Roberts […]

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My bad: Curt Flood documentary to air July 13

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I don’t know where I got the idea that this was going to air on HBO’s Real Sports, but it’s actually going to be on July 13, the day after the All-Star Game. From SportsNewser: Curt Flood, whose pioneering fight against baseball’s reserve clause paved the way for the advent of free agency in the […]

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What I’m doing on my summer vacation

2011 title

What vacation? Work, work work. That’s why my entries have been tailing off of late. With three months left til the due date, I have almost 100 of the 501 titles I need for the University of Nebraska Press project. As Regis says, “I’m only one man!” Anyway, I will try to post as often […]

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Literary blasts from the past: Biggio’s big hit, Thomas’ tater

2008 title

Two perennial all-stars achieved major milestones on this date in2007. Frank Thomas became the 21st member of the 500 home run club when he hit a three-run shot against the Blue Jays’ Carlos Silva on the way to a 5 – 4 White Sox win. Meanwhile Craig Biggio became the 27th member of the 3,000 […]

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Literary/musical blast from the past: TMOTTBG

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Bookshelf shorthand for Take Me Out to The Ball Game, as per Baseball-Reference.com’s Bullpen: To honor the lyricist of Take Me Out to the Ballgame, Jack Norworth Day is celebrated at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn. Neither Norworth nor his partner Albert Von Tilzer, who wrote the music, had ever seen a game when they created […]

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Bookshelf Review: Nobody’s Perfect

2011 title

Two Men, One Call, and a Game for Baseball History by Armando Galarraga and Jim Joyce, with Daniel Paisner. Atlantic Monthly Press, 2011 One of the highlights of the 2010 Major League season was something that didn’t happen. Armando Galarraga, a pitcher for the Detroit Tigers, did not get his perfect game — a no-hit, […]

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Times-ly story on Derek Jeter

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Michael Sokolove has cover story honors for the Sunday Magazine, which looks at Derek Jeter as the poster boy for aging athletes — and not necessarily in a good way. Man, I wish I could be 37 again. I wish I could remember 37 again. In a related note, here’s a look at the “decline” […]

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Jose Canseco: Thank me very much

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

For better or worse, Canseco gets (deserves?) credit for blowing the whistle on steroids and PED. It’s not his fault if those in a position to do something about it.

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Literary blast form the past: Bat boys

History

“Due to a bat boy being hit by Butch Wynegar’s line drive foul ball, Yankees officials enact a new rule mandating the team’s bat boys wear protective helmets during all games.” (BR Bullpen) Pertinent titles: Bat Boy: Coming of Age with the New York Yankees My Bat Boy Days: Lessons I Learned from the Boys […]

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Placing my pre-order now: The Complete History of the Montreal Expos

Just read

Would if I could upon learning that Jonah (The Extra 2%: How Wall Street Strategies Took a Major League Baseball Team from Worst to First) Keri is working on the “definitive” history of the team. Although I was not born there, my maternal side hails from that city and I have fond memories of family […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Wally Yonamine

2008 title

Yonamine, the first Asian-American to play baseball in Japan, was born this date in 1925 in Honolulu. He passed away earlier this year at the age of 86. Robert Fitts published his biography — Wally Yonamine: The Man Who Changed Japanese Baseball — in 2008.

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