* Rocket's red glare nothing but 'roid rage?

2009 title

Jeff Pearlman’s bio on Roger Clemens came out a few months back. Do we really need another? I’m reading American Icon: The Fall of Roger Clemens and the Rise of Steroids in America’s Pastime right now, so I’ll save my comments on it till I’m done. In the meantime, here are a few items from […]

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* Media guide review: Tampa Bay Rays

2009 title

When you consider that theTampa Bay Rays have only been around since 1998, it’s pretty impressive that they can publish a media guide that’s almost as big (488 pages) as that of the Dodgers (509) and even bigger than the Pirates’ (372), two teams that have been around for more than 100 years. Cover: The […]

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* "This is a simple game…."

"Oddballs"

Meant to post this as it happened. The best laid plans… So what’s up with the recent rash of line-up mistakes? First Tampa Bay skipper Joe Maddon inserts two players in the third baseman position and no one as a DH, thereby losing that offensive possibility and forcing pitcher  Andy Sonnanstine to tote lumber. Fortunately, […]

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RK Review: Legendary Yankee Stadium

2009 title

Memories & Memorabilia from the House that Ruth Built, by T.S. O’Connell (Krause Publications) Leave it to other books to dwell on records and anecdotes, Legendary Yankee Stadium is, in fact, a collectors, dream, assembling scores of collectibles depicting some of the most beloved players in the long, storied history of the franchise. O’Connell, the […]

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* RK Review: Oh, Johnny

2009 title

by Jim Lehrer (Random House) Veteran newsman Jim Lehrer considers loss in his newest novel, the story of a young baseball player called upon to serve his country during World War II. Like many young men of the era, Johnny Wrigley had to put his life on hold. A promising young athlete, he is sent […]

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RK Review: Straw: Finding My Way

2009 title

with John Strausbaugh (HarperCollins). What is it with Harper Collins? Have I not been paying attention, or has this become the go-to publisher for titles dealing with New York baseball players and their problems of one kind or another? I may be wrong, but I believe Darryl Strawberry’s autobiography was on the docket before Selena […]

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* Now hear this: Gabriel Schechter

"Oddballs"

Gabriel Schechter has, in my estimation (and his), the dream job. Working at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown as a researcher in the library, the chance to be surrounded by the game in a small-town setting, a Norman Rockwell experience, as he put it in our recent conversation for The Bookshelf. Schechter recently […]

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* Road trip

Author Profile / interview

Jack Keruoac, baseball nerd? Who knew? According to this recent piece from The New York Times, the beat author created his own fantasy sports teams and leagues. Makes sense, since he was basicaly living in a fantasy world anyway. He obsessively played a fantasy baseball game of his own invention, charting the exploits of made-up […]

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* Why baseball is like (fill-in-the-blank).

Because I can...

In this case, it’s the craft of writing. Wrightinhood.com posted this list of sayings from some of the greats in the game, including Ty Cobb, Yogi Berra, Bill Veeck, and Crash Davis (?) and how they can apply to the creative process.

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* Author Q & A: Bill Reynolds

2009 title

The author of ’78: The Boston Red Sox, a Historic Game, and a Divided City, gets the treament from the good folks at HuggingHaroldReynolds (any relation?).

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* Steroids a part of baseball in Korea? Sure, why not.

2009 title

That’s according toMa Hae-young, a Korean pro player (right), in his new book,Yagu Bonsaek “roughly translated as The True Color of Baseball in Korean,” says this article from JoongAng Daily. “During my playing days, I witnessed several players taking banned substances such as steroids on a regular basis,” he writes in the book. “It wasn’t […]

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* A list of suggested baseball readings from our neighbors to the North, eh?

Classic title

AskMen.com, Canadian version, recently posted this entry on summer reading, including Moneyball Juiced Baseball Prospectus 2009 The Catcher Was a Spy: The Msyterious Life of Moe Berg Ball Four (at number 5? You kiddin’ me?) Bang the Drum Slowly Perfect I’m Not (I’d like to meet the marleting genius who decided that changing the title […]

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* Here's something you don't see everyday

Fiction

Baseball fan ficiton! In this case, it comes from Aaron Shinsano at the East Windup Chronicle blog.

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* This week (May 25) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

The main baseball story is a feature by  Tom Verducci on Randy Johnson. Wish they’d post the pictures with the articles.

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* Another reason to join SABR: Free books

"Oddballs"

From the SABR List-serve: Marc Okkonen’s terrific pictorial book, 2000 Cups of Coffee, is now available for download on the members-only portion of the SABR website. You can find a link to it as soon as you log onto the members’ page. This book contains images of approximately 2,000 major leaguers of the 1900-1949 era. […]

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* Now hear this: Curt Smith

2009 title

Curt Smith, who has a professed fondness for the boys in the baseball booth, has published another in-depth biography about an broadcasting icon. In Pull Up A Chair: The Vin Scully Story (Potomac), Smith — who has covered other industry stars as Mel Allen and Dizzy Dean— combines his admiration for the man was had […]

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* Review: St. Louis Cardinals Past & Present

2009 title

From the Cardinal-centric blog, The Cardinal Nation. Upshot: [Author Doug] Feldmann’s passion and knowledge of Cardinals baseball really comes through. His parents grew up in St. Louis and southern Illinois respectively, so he appreciates the regional breadth and success of the franchise.

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* Shades of Crash Davis

"Oddballs"

In this article on the Atlanta Braves’ Brian Barton, the write pretty much brands the ballplayer an egghead. Last summer, during his first full season in the major leagues, he read 17 books. He recently finished off the 900-page “Roots” by Alex Haley. Which made me think of this line from Bull Durham by Max […]

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* Another "uh-oh" moment for Steinbrenner author

Uncategorized

That is, according to this entry onthe Yankee-centric RiverAvenueBlues blog regarding Peter Golenbock’s latest release,George: The Poor Little Rich Boy Who Built the Yankees Empire. Why isn’t George higher up on my reading list? Other than having more interesting books ahead of it, there’s another reason: factual accuracy. Murray Chass (h/t BBTF) points to Goldenbock’s […]

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* Can I get fries with that, Mickey?

"Oddballs"

Having eaten at Mickey Mantle’s Manhattan restaurant, I found this review of a two-year old book by owner William Liederman interesting yet curious (because of the timing). Nothing to especially recommend it other than the subject matter. It’s a throwback to the days of Toot Shor‘s.

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