* Please, no more

Because I can...

Chris Berman on Home Run Derby. How many times can you listen to “Back, back, back!!!”?

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* Editor interview: Paul Dickson

Academic/scholarly journals

From the Visual Thesaurus website, comes the first of a two-part Q&A with the editor of The Dickson Baseball Dictionary. Thanks to Abby Meth Kantor, managing editor of the New jersey Jewish News, for the heads-up. * * * The Bountiful Lexicon of Baseball As Major League Baseball heads into the All-Star break, we’re taking […]

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* Here come de judge?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Bruce Weber, author of As They See ‘Em: A Fan’s Travels in the Land of Umpires (one of my top three books of the year), published this piece in The New York Times’ Week in review section, comapring the roles of arbiters in the legal system and on the baseball diamond. “Have you read Roe v. […]

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* Spooky stuff

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the NY Times, this piece on Milwaukee’s Pfister Hotel and some potentially unexpect (and univited) guests. Sounds like somebody’s been reading Haunted Baseball past his bedtime. .

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* Redford having a Neyer moment?

Because I can...

Apropos to the previous entry, we might have a Rob Neyer moment here. In the snippet, Redford claims to have been in New York where he attended a Yankees-Red Sox game. He mentions that Maris and Mantle were in the lineup, but not Williams. He doesn’t give a  date, but it had to have been […]

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* HBO airs ted Williams documentary

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

We won’t be done with the All-Star break until Thursday, so if your baseball Jones gets too strong, watch HBO’s documentary about the Splendid Splinter in Ted Williams: There Goes the Greatest Hitter That Ever Lived. The special premiers Wednesday at 9:30 p.m. EST. Here’s a review from Newsday. You can read Williams’ ESPN obituary […]

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* The magazine industry's decline has a long reach

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Just ask Lenny Dykstra, according to this article from Folio, an industry publication. Many of Dykstra’s financial woes stem from the failed launch of the Player’s Club, a monthly magazine for professional athletes he published in partnership with Doubledown Media—a publisher of magazines aimed at the Wall Street elite—which went out of business earlier this […]

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* "He's not dead; he's just resting…."

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the famous Monty Python “Parrot Sketch.” Why do I bring this up? because Moneyball, the movie, may not be dead after all. Sony Pictures Entertainment has quietly moved to salvage its troubled movie project “Moneyball” by hiring the prominent screenwriter Aaron Sorkin for a quick rewrite, while looking to add Scott Rudin, known for […]

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* Not to be judged as dissing Kate Smith

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

NY fan gets $10K in ‘God Bless America’ suit

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* Bookshelf Q&A: Larry Tye

2009 title

Larry Tye, author of the critically-acclaimed new biography of Satchel Paige, is a busy (and happy) man these days, making the rounds of TV and radio shows and enjoying reading the favorable reviews as they pile up. He was gracious enough to take some time from his hectic schedule to answer a few questions from […]

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* Review links galore

2009 title

Thanks to our friend Greg Spira for his list of links to baseball book reviews, interviews, and features. One of the hot titles this year is As They See ‘Em: A Fan’s Travels in the Land of Umpires, by Bruce Weber of The New York Times. In addition to two (!) reviews in his own […]

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* RK Review: American Icon

2009 title

The Fall of Roger Clemens and the Rise of Steroids in America’s Pastime, by Teri Thompson, Nathaniel Vinton, Michael O’Keeffe, and Christian Red. Knopf, 2009. In case you haven’t been paying attention, the topic du an in baseball lit is steroids/PED. No less than four major titles consider the science and those who use performance […]

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* Another list of "bests"

Because I can...

I participated in a survey of the “best” baseball fiction and non-fiction books from the Hardball Cooperative site. It was an honor to be included with such learned contributors. Of course, one person’s meat is another’s poison; the comment’s made to the Baseball Think Factory, to which a link was posted, indicates that quite clearly.  […]

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* This week (July 13) in Sports Illustrated

Baseball movies

I no longer subscribe to the print version of SI, but I do pick up the occasional copy (which is kind of silly since the cost of four or five newsstand editions is roughly equivalent to a deep-discount subscription). The annual “Where Are They Now” is one of them. The editors usually do a good […]

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* Review: Bert Sugar's Hall of Fame: A Living History of America's Greatest Game

2009 title

From the Salt Lake Tribune. Upshot: Open and book anywhere and begin. “The fun is to know what’s on the inside,” he said. “That was story I wanted to tell.” Bert Sugar’s Hall of Fame is a tale well told.

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* Dodger Dogs? Not quite.

Asian baseball

This travel piece from the July 5 edition of The New York Times includes a quote from Robert Whiting, an author on Japanese baseball. He recently published an updated version of the classic book on the topic, You Gotta Have Wa.

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* Author profile: Jayson Stark

2009 title

The author of Worth The Wait: Tales of the 2008 Phillies gets the treatment from the Reading Eagle.

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* Review: Straw

2009 title

From TrueblueLA (“Where The Dodger Dogs Are Always Grilled”), this review of the new Strawberry autobio.

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* Pedroia's book: Not letting any grass grow under his feet

2009 title

And why not. Remember Joe Charbonneau? The article also links to an excerpt from the book. “My life in the game?” Must be a thin book.

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* Happy Birthday, Satchel

Uncategorized

Born this date (or not) in 1906. Paige has returned to the public eye thanks to Larry Tye’s excellent new biography. Here’s a brief review from Booklist, the magazine of the American Library Association (thanks to Greg Spira for the tip). And one more go around — for the time being, at least — on […]

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