* Q&A with S.L. Price

2009 title

The New York Times “Bats” blog recently ran this Q&A with the author of Heart of the Game: Life, Death, and Mercy in Minor League America (Ecco), which is the heartbreaking story of the on-field death of Mike Coolbaugh, the first base coach for the Tulsa Drillers who was hit by a foul line drive. […]

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* Hot dipity dog

Because I can...

Found this cool website: Dipity.com. It’s a site about memes, which, according to Wikipedia, are “postulated unit[s] or element[s] of cultural ideas, symbols or practices that gets transmitted from one mind to another through speech, gestures, rituals, or other imitable phenomena.” But you knew that already, didn;t you. Anyway, I added The Bookshelf to Diptiy. […]

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* Lest we forget: Gerald W. Scully

Academic/scholarly journals

For those of you who don’t know who he is (and I must admit I didn’t either), the late Dr. Scully was the first to apply labor economics to sports, said former colleague Philip K. Porter, now professor of economics at the University of South Florida. Sports economists refer to his groundbreaking work as “the […]

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* Review: You Know Me, Al

Classic title

Love finding reviews of baseball books from non-baseball sources. In this case, the Ring Lardner classic from Pundit and Pundette.

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* Lest we forget: Moe Berg

Lest We Forget

who died this day in 1972. Also see My Time with the Catcher Spy Morris Moe Berg, by Neil Farkas.

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* Happy Birthday, Eric Davis

Autobiography/memoirs

Davis was another of those ballplayers with Mickey Mantle-potential, compared with his friend Darryl Strawberry, who had Ted Williams-potential. Neither of them fulfilled the predictions but both did share a life-threatening malady: colon cancer. Davis wrote about his travails in Born to Play: The Eric Davis Story, Life Lessons in Overcoming Adversity on and off […]

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* This week (June 1) in Sports Illustrated

History

The main baseball article is John Heyman’s look at the recent late-inning heroics by the Yankees. Other items include a sidebar on the Tigers’ resurgence and Albert Chen’s recounting of Harvey Haddix’s non-perfect game just 50 years ago.

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* "Hello, central casting? Get me Hatteberg!"

Classic title

From the June 1 issue of Sports Illustrated, this quote by Scott Hatteberg, who was featured in Micheal Lewis’ book Moneyball, soon to be a major (?) motion picture: Former A’s first baseman, on being cast as himself in the film Moneyball: “I don’t know how you can screw up playing yourself, but I’m afraid […]

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Happy Birthday, Kirk Gibson

Birthday greetings

The “author” of one of the game’s most-played highlights turns 52 today. Bottom of the Ninth

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* Weather report: Chance of 'Flurry'

2009 title

Keith Olberman writes the “Baseball Nerd” under the MLB.blogs banner. In this entry, he takes Curt Smith to task for an error in Pull Up a Chair, his new biography of legendary Dodgers announcer Vin Scully. Olberman, who makes his living being contrary, used to be a baseball book reviewer in a former life. “[O]ne […]

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* Bits and pieces

2009 title

From The New York Times, another look at Paul Dickson and his new Baseball Dictionary (May 23). A review of Michael Shapiro’s Bottom of the Ninth from the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (May 24). Phiily.com on the new A-Rod book (May 24). Author appearance: Amy Whorf McGuiggan will discuss her new book, Take Me Out to The […]

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* The game according to Forbes

2009 title

Didn’t see a stand-alone baseball issue like I did last year, but here are some baseball items from Forbes.com on the state of the game, who the big players are (business-wise), and other fun topics.

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* 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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