Literary birthday greetings: Jane Austen

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

They don’t get much more literary than this, which comes from the Hall of Fame’s Time Wiles via Facebook: Happy birthday to one of the first baseball writers, Jane Austen. From Northanger Abbey: …it was not very wonderful that Catherine, who had by nature nothing heroic about her, should prefer cricket, baseball, riding on horseback, […]

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Lest we forget: Bob Feller

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The pride of The Greatest Generation died yesterday at the age of 92. Feller was one of the bona fide star athletes who served with distinction in World War II, sacrificing prime seasons away from the game when they might have been able to find ways around the draft; Feller could easily have claimed status […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Hit Dog

Biography

Mo Vaughn turns 43 today. I never saw a hitter get so bad so quick. He was a slugger for the Red Sox from 1991-98, winning the AL MVP in ’95 and had two more great years with the Angels before falling through a trap door with the Mets and calling it a career. For […]

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Pass the popcorn: A League of Their Own

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

There are certain baseball movies I never fail to watch whenever they’re on TV. Although with some, I find the more I watch, the less entertaining they seem and the more annoyed I get. Case in point: A League of Their Own. For the most part, I still love this film. But the past few […]

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“Captain Kirkus, to the bridge please.”

2010 title

Kirkus Reviews just posted several “tops” lists, including two baseball titles. Jane Leavy’s The Last Boy: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood is among the top biographies of 2010. Dan Epstein’s Big Hair and Plastic Grass: A Funky Ride Through Baseball and America in the Swinging ’70s has been deemed as one of […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Craig Biggio

Baseball records

Craig Biggio, the last player to join the 3,000-hit club, turns 45 today. The book on him: Biggio: The Final Game. Honorary mention: Scott Hatteberg. Who’s he, you ask? Basically, Hatteberg — who walked 562 and struck out just 503 times and had a .361 OBP over his 14-year career — was one of the […]

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Ban Charlie Belcher

"Oddballs"

I’m 95 percent certain this Tampa-based reporter did a piece from Yankees Fantasy camp when I was down there last year (wish I could find that video). It seems hypocritical of me to say another journalist shouldn’t be allowed to do a first-person story, but he makes the rest of us look bad, dressed in […]

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Literary birthday greetings

2009 title

A whole bunch today, beginning with Fergie Jenkins, the Hall of Fame pitcher, who turns 68. You often read about how dark-skinned Hispanics players such as Robert Clemente or Vic Power were amazed by the prejudice they encountered in the 1950s and 1960s, coming from countries where none existed. I wonder how Jenkins felt, coming […]

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Thanks for the memories: Maury Allen and Vic Ziegel

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Harvey Araton published this sweet tribute to these veteran sportswriters who passed away over the last few months. While I didn’t know Mr. Ziegel, I did have the pleasure of making Maury‘s acquaintance and though I didn’t have the same relationship with him as Araton, I did find him very open and charitable when it […]

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And 104 voices said, “whew!”

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

So if you had a copy of the list of 104 players who allegedly tested positive for steroids, you couldn’t use it.

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Winner, winner, chicken dinner.

2010 title

Congrats to Howard Cole,  winner of the November Bookshelf giveaway of Willie Mays: The Life, The Legend by James S. Hirsch. Mays was recently named one of the years notable non-fiction titles by The New York Times. You can listen to my interview with Hirch here. December’s book is Fifth-Nine in ’84, by Edward Achron. […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Swish

Biography

Bill Nicholson was born this date in 1914. He was considered one of the great sluggers of his generation, leading the National League in home runs in 1943 and 1944. He retired in 1953 with 235 four-baggers. With so many athletes serving in WWII. I would love to see — just out of curiosity — […]

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Today is BBA Day

"Oddballs"

Don’t look for it on you calendar, but today is Baseball Blogger Alliance Day. BBA is a group of bloggers — some 230 or so — who banded together, as it were, in 2009.  There’s at least one blogger per Major league team except, inexplicably, the Atlanta Braves (although that might have changed by the […]

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“Quickie” publications

2010 title

Not sure how I feel about these things. On the one hand, the technology is available so that it’s easy to turn books like these over quickly. On the other hand, is it an homage, or just a money grab? Newspapers (such as the San Francisco Chronicle, left) have managed fast turnarounds when their local […]

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TIME for another sports list

2010 title

TIME magazine published its top 10 list of everything this year, including sports. Baseball is at the top of the top: Baseball’s Imperfect Game (no further explanation needed) LeBron’s Bad Decision (no further explanation needed) A College Basketball Cinderella Comes Oh So Close (Butler vs. Duke) Football Uses Its Head (concussions) Ghana’s World Cup Giveaway […]

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TWIBB: Dec. 10, 2010

2010 title

The top baseball books, according to Amazon.com as of Friday, Dec. 10, at 11 a.m. Title Rank General The Last Boy: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood, by Jane Leavy 1 Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, by Michael Lewis 2 Beyond Belief: Finding the Strength to Come Back, by Josh […]

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Picture this

2011 title

One of my favorite off-beat baseball sites is Craig Robinson’s Flip Flop Flyball. (I wrote about Robinson and his work awhile back.) Rather than the usual staid numbers, Robinson — a graphic artist originally from Great Britain — takes unusual items and turns them into colorful graphic representations. Among the topics he’s considered on the […]

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Readers, take “note”

2010 title

Three baseball entries are among the non-fiction titles on The New York Times as “100 Notable Books of 2010.” THE LAST BOY: Mickey Mantle and the End of America’s Childhood. By Jane Leavy. (Harper/HarperCollins, $27.99.) Many biographies of Mantle have been written, but Leavy connects the dots in new and disturbing ways. THE LAST HERO: […]

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Sweet dreams are made of these: Bill Lewers’ fan memoir

2009 title

I’ve been putting this off for a long time, basically out of a sense that I had more important things to do, which is more a failing of mine than the actual truth. I’m speaking here of the fan memoir, a book of recollections and anecdotes taken not from the life of a famous athlete, […]

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Literary birthday greetings: Moose Mussina

Biography

Mike Mussina, who turns 42 today, was considered one of the brighter players in the game, if for no ohter reason than the fact he did crossword puzzles…in pen, yet! He shared the spotlight with Mets’ pitcher Tom Glavine as the focus of John Feinstein’s 2008 book, Living on the Black: Two Pitchers, Two Teams, […]

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