* Lest we forget: William Safire

Lest We Forget

The wordsmith passed away at the age of 79 on Sept. 27. I’ve always had a love for words and language, how everything comes together. Safire was a hero when it came to bringing it all together without being too academic about it. From the “On Language” column — Safire’s outlet for many years — […]

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* RK Review: 1941: The Greatest Year in Sports

Baseball in war time

Two Baseball Legends, Two Boxing Champs, and the Unstoppable Thoroughbred Who Made History in the Shadow of War, by Mike Vacarro (Doubleday, 2006) (Note: This review originally appeared in my previous blog on baseball and books a few years back.) While he does cover other sports in his newest offering, Mike Vaccaro, New York Post […]

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* Back to work / Bits and pieces

2009 title

The holidays are over now so let’s get back to business. More on Posnanski and his new book, The Machine, from the Wall Street Journal; Hartford Courant; Rob Neyer and ESPN (interview); Cincinnati.com (“Latest book may be the best on Reds’ dynasty”); Baseball Prospectus Radio had this interview with the author with the author (audio […]

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* Gut yom tov

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Jewish for “Happy Holiday,” As Jews around the world gather tonight to mark the holiest day on the calendar, George Vecsey offered this column in today’s Sunday Times. Instead of putting the game at 8 p.m. — prime time, as the networks call it — ESPN and Major League Baseball are accommodating thousands of fans […]

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* One-shot deals

"Oddballs"

With the Mets season just about over, I needed to find new ways to amuse myself. When I was a kid at day camp, we used to play this game, “initials.” One player would think of the name of some baseball player, the other would try to guess. You got a home run if you […]

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* Even worse

Newspapers

Today’s NY Times doesn’t even have a story on the Mets at all, while the Yankees have two. Coverage of last nights “dramatic” win is mention only via an Associated Press report. At least it was the lead item.

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* TWIBB — September 25

2009 title

This week in baseball books, featuring the best-sellers according to Amazon.com on Friday, September 25. Title Rank General The Machine: A Hot Team, a Legendary Season, and a Heart-stopping World Series: The Story of the 1975 Cincinnati Reds, by Joe Posnanski 1 Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game, by Michael Lewis 2 Game […]

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* Coming soon to a library near you

Baseball program

(If you live in the Washington, DC area.) The Library of Congress will host a series of baseball films from Sept. 28-Oct. 2, as part of its “Baseball Americana Lunchtime Film Series” in the Pickford Theater of the Madison Building. Monday, Sept. 28 In Search of History: The World Series Fixed! The Black Sox Scandal […]

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* Library of Congress holds Baseball Americana program

Annoucements

The Library of Congress will host a two-day event to mark the release of Baseball Americana: Treasures from the Library of Congress, “a beautifully illustrated book featuring more than 350 images (many never before published) from the late 18th century to the late 20th century,” beginning Friday, Oct. 2. The program, which features an appearance […]

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* This week (Sept. 28) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Lee Jenkins pays homage to Detroit, the backbone of the country, and the Tigers, with a photo of Comerica Park on the cover. Other baseball items of note: Joe Sheehan on the upcoming free agents: Buyer beware. Phil Taylor on Brad Lidge

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* Seeing Reds

2009 title

Joe Posnanski’s new book, The Machine, is getting a lot of buzz these days, including: A brief note from the RedlegNation blog A little mutual admiration from his former employer, the Kansas City Star A review from Letters on Pages, which claims to offer “The Best Non-Fiction Book Reviews…Ever.” Unless the writer of this piece […]

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* Is it over yet?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

You know the season is over for your team when the newspapers publish a feature article…and conclude with a brief graph of two about the game. Like today. The New York Times printed this piece on Daniel Murphy approaching a club record for doubles (stop the presses!) and winding up with a “and, oh, by […]

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* Baseball's "urban dictionary"

"Oddballs"

From the eclectic PitchersndPoets site comes the “Rogue’s Baseball Index,” a sort of urban dictionary about the national pastime. RBI is divided into several categories, including entries about players, fans, management, media, et al. A random entry: The George Will is a hyper-intellectualized fan who gets so caught up in the history and legend and […]

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* RK reviews: The End of Baseball and Safe at Home

2008 title

I don’t often read baseball fiction these days. I find them too hit-or-miss, pardon the metaphor. One problem is that authors often employ too much exposition, as if their readership knows nothing about the game. Those who do know a fair deal about how baseball is played or its history, might find this boring and […]

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* TWIBB — September 19

2008 title

This week in baseball books, featuring the best-sellers according to Amazon.com on Saturday, September 19. Title Rank General The Machine: A Hot Team, a Legendary Season, and a Heart-stopping World Series: The Story of the 1975 Cincinnati Reds, Posnanski 1 Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Games, Lewis 2 The Yankee Years, Torre and […]

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* Author appearance: Fritz Peterson

2009 title

Former Yankees pitcher Fritz Peterson appeared at the Yogi Berra Museum and Education Center in Little Falls, NJ last night to discuss his auto-biography, Mickey Mantle is Going to Heaven. The ex-big-leaguer, who made headlines back in 1973 when he and teammate Mike Kekich traded families, is facing serious health issues, which he said prompted […]

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* Because you can keep the first first foul ball you ever caught on a bookshelf

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Unless, of course, your toddler tosses it back. From Big League Stew, a Yahoo sports blog: Since being featured on the front page of Yahoo! on Wednesday afternoon, the Big League Stew post containing the highlight has been one of the most clicked in this blog’s history and I don’t think it’s hard to figure […]

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* Who's Who haiku

Baseball poetry

Very small pictures. Records major and minor. DL data, too. (Most lines are either “filed for free agency” or “on disabled list…”) Jeter gets a page (post-season states included); Ben Zobrist comes last. Pitchers and batters — position segregation — split the book in two. Nowhere else can one find such great information, so thank […]

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* Q&A with Chris Jaffe

2009 title

Baseball Daily Digest conducted this extensive Q&A with the author of the upcoming McFarland title, Evaluating Baseball Managers: A Comprehensive History and Performance Analysis, 1876-2008. Part One. Part Two.

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* Lest we forget: Mary Travers

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Peter, Paul, and Mary performed one of the sweetest renditions of “Playing Right Field,” a classic baseball song that reveals the joys and fears of being a kid at play. Travers died yesterday at the age of 72. [vodpod id=Groupvideo.3438248&w=425&h=350&fv=] RIGHT FIELD Willy Welch– © 1986 Playing Right Music Saturday summers, when I was a […]

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