* Author interview: Jeff Pearlman

Audio

Jeff Pearlman, author of the damning new biography on Roger Clemens, took a few minutes to discuss his project with The Bookshelf. Pearlman’s latest — The Rocket That Fell to Earth: Roger Clemens and the Rage for Baseball Immortality (Harper) — is a frightening tale of a man who is at once on top of […]

Read the full article →

* RK Review: The Rocket That Fell to Earth

2009 title

Roger Clemens and the Rage for Baseball Immortality, by Jeff Pearlman. Harper, 2009. Over the last several years, almost every baseball fan — and a lot of non-fans as well — have felt a sense of betrayal. Their heroes have feet of clay; the emperor has no clothes. What makes the situation all the more […]

Read the full article →

* Mensa meeting

Because I can...

The following comes from my Mensa page-a-day calendar (no wisecracks) for March 19: The storage box for my baseball cards has room for most of my cards, and, on a nearby shelf, I keep the extra 16 cards that do not fit. If I expand the length of the box by 30%, I’ll have room […]

Read the full article →

* Can you Topps this? Artist Brian Fox

Artist profile

Kudos to Mr. Fox. The artist received the assignment of a lifetime. His work has been selected by Topps as a special insert into their 2009 set. But not as a mere insert. Distributed among the thousands of packs are “redemption cards” which can be exchanged for one of 50 individually drawn card-size sketches. So […]

Read the full article →

* A dubious selection

2009 title

USA Today published this list of “Five authors make a pitch for baseball.” I wonder how hard Milano’s PR people are pushing the book. To be honest, I have not read it and want to be fair. But to have hers get top billing over thoughtful and laborious efforts by the likes of Paul Dickson, […]

Read the full article →

* "I got yer peanuts and Cracker Jack right here, grandpa."

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Because I keep cookbooks on the shelf, and that’s close enough for jazz… The New York Times ran two pieces today on the food fans can expect at the new area ballparks, one for the Yankees, and one for the Mets.

Read the full article →

* Lest we forget: Arthur Richman

Lest We Forget

The long-time baseball writer and executive died today at the age of 83. After spending 25 years with the Mets as promotions director, traveling secretary, public relations director, and special assistant to the general manager, Richman joined the Yankees in May, 1989 as senior VP. He had a hand in the hiring of Joe Torre […]

Read the full article →

* With mega-apologies to Eliot Asinof

Uncategorized

The new Eight Men Out, according to the NY Daily News (out of Hall of Fame consideratio, that is): Alex Rodriguez Barry Bonds Roger Clemens Mark McGwire Raphael Palmiero Ivan Rodriguez Gary Sheffield Sammy Sosa

Read the full article →

* Shoot me now

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Yuri Sacart, the cousin of Yankees player Alex Rodriguez who reportedly injected the baseball star with steroids, is writing a book. Sacart has joined the Creative Artists Agency and is shopping around his tell-all to major publishers. According to Allheadlinenews.com. Of course, I’ll be really embarrassed if this is an “Onion”-like outfit.

Read the full article →

* Announcement: Remake of Damn Yankees? Damn!

Annoucements

Because you can frame the ticket stubs and put them on the bookshelf…Or simply the book, The Year the Yankees Lost First The Pennant, by Douglas Wallop, on which the musical was based. So, a remake of Damn Yankees, starring Jim Carrey as the Devil and Jake Gyllenhaal as “Shoeless Joe from Hannibal, Mo?” Seems […]

Read the full article →

* Baseball as inspiration

Because I can...

From mentalfloss.com: If there’s one author who bridges the cultural divide between the United States and Japan, it’s Haruki Murakami. The 60-year-old Kyoto native started writing relatively late in life, at age 29, and it was America’s national pastime that inspired him. While attending a baseball game in Tokyo, Murakami saw American Dave Hilton hit […]

Read the full article →

* More Christmas colors

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From the BizofBaseball site, more on the Red and Green Books, including a few interesting snippets.

Read the full article →

* Editor interview: Gary Gillette

2009 title

Gillette, who with Pete Palmer co-edited The Emerald Guide to Baseball 2009, was interviewed by our good friends over at Seamheads.com. The PDF version of the Guide is available at no charge at SABR.org.

Read the full article →

* Magazine reference resources

Annoucements

From SABR’s Jim Charlton: Google Book Search has the full-text, searchable archive of New York Magazine, dating back to the 1960s; Jet Magazine, dating back to the 1950s; Ebony Magazine, dating back to the 1950s; Prevention Magazine, dating back to 2006; Popular Science Magazine, dating back to the 1870s; and Baseball Digest, dating back to […]

Read the full article →

* Walter O'Malley and revisionist history

2008 title

A revised version of Henry D. Fetter’s unpublished paper that received a 2007 McFarland-SABR Research Award was recently published under the title “Revising the Revisionists: Walter O’Malley, Robert Moses and the End of the Brooklyn Dodgers” in the journal New York History (Vol. 89, no. 1, Winter 2008).

Read the full article →

* Alyssa Milano, baseball auteur

2009 title

You knew this was coming. Why does Milano get to do a baseball book? What does she bring to the table other than being a “connected” fan? Is there an order form in the back of the book to order from her line of MLB-available clothing?

Read the full article →

* It's not easy being green…or red

Because I can...

More on the decision by MLB to cease the printed publication of the Red and Green Books. Murray Chass wrote about this awhile ago, and sure enough, it’s become a generational thing. David Appelman of FanGraphs.com: … as a younger person who uses the Internet (and sometimes even writes about baseball), I actually do have […]

Read the full article →

* Review: Shoeless Joe and The Celebrant

Classic title

From The Henry Wiggen Blog, this review of the W.P. Kinsella classic and Eric Role Greenberg’s novel.

Read the full article →

* Review: As They See 'Em

2009 title

Another review of Bruce Weber’s book on umpires? This one is by Jim Bouton, and the author of the seminal Ball Four, who does his usual witty job. But as interesting as it is to get different takes, one wonders why the publication that employs Weber would publish more than one critique just over a […]

Read the full article →

* Review: Yogi Berra: Eternal Yankee

2009 title

The Washington Post‘s Steven V. Roberts wrote this review of Allen Barra’s new bio of the Yogster. I wonder how many that makes now. Of course, Berra was on a couple of other teams, but that went by the wayside. Barra is an interesting writer. One of his titles on my to-read list is the […]

Read the full article →
script type="text/javascript"> var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-5496371-4']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })();