* Whoa, dude

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The literary gadabout Lenny Dykstra is in a bit of a pickle, it seems. In the New York Post‘s Media Ink column, Keith J, Kelley writes about the difficulties between the former pop culture icon/car wash mogul/ financial guru and his literary agent, who’s taken him to court to receive back monies. Dykstra was supposed […]

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* Congrats, Henderson and Rice

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The two newest members of the Baseball Hall of Fame. Henderson is already the subject / “author” of a couple of books, but I bet it won’t be long before we have a Rice title in book stores everywhere.

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* Review: The Black Prince of Baseball

Biography

Hal Chase and the Mythology of the Game, by Donald Dewey and Nicholas Acocella (SportsClassic Books, 2004) as reviewed on Seamheads.com. Upshot: This volume is tremendously researched and the documentation presented from various newspapers hands the reader a first-hand impression that the interpretations of an author could never convey 90 years after the fact. It […]

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Authors appearance

2007 title

Baseball authors Talmage Boston and Milton Jamail are among confirmed guests for the third annual Central Texas Mid-winter meeting organized by the Rogers Hornsby Chapter of the Society of American Baseball Research. The meeting begins at 10 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 17 in Room 320 of Old Main on the campus of Texas State University. Boston […]

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Any publicity is good publicity

Classic title

Seeking to make the most from the opportunity, Columbia University Press posted this little update after Charles A. Alexander, author of Breaking the Slump: Baseball in the Depression Era (published by CUP in 2002), was interviewed the other day in The New York Times. I inadvertently omitted his book from a brief listing of others […]

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Review: Game Time

Audio

Baseball GB posted this review of Roger Angell’s 2004 collection. An amazing amount of the book can be read here, thanks to Google Books. Like any master storyteller, Angell’s work translates well to audio. This sample from audio.com comes from The Summer Game, another collection of his essays that appear mostly in The New Yorker […]

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* Baseball in paradise

Older title

It’s too late to attend the book-signing, but for those who are interested, there’s a re-issue of Honolulu Stadium: Where Hawaii Played as reported in the Honolulu Advertiser.

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* Review: Boo, A Life in Baseball, Well-Lived

2008 title

Rick Cleveland’s biography (published by Lemuria Press) of Boo Ferriss, a pitcher for the Boston Red Sox from 1945-50, as glowingly reviewed in the Clarksdale (MS) Press Register. Ferriss, a Mississippi product, won 21 and 25 games in his first two major league seasons, 12 the next year and never in double figures again.

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* Review: Rob Neyer's Big Book of Baseball Legends

2008 title

Another look at the new classic on shooting down baseball myths, by The Joy of Sox blog. Upshot: For those of you thinking “Who cares?” or “Why ruin a good story?”, stay away from this book. But if you’re as curious as I am about how Neyer went about his investigations and when he found […]

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* A trio of Yankees' books for the hot stove league

2008 title

And no, we’re not advocating burning them. This piece from the Pride of the Yankees blog on NJ.com features 101 Reasons to Love the Yankees, Babe Ruth: Remembering the Bambino in Stories, Photos & Memorabilia, and Remembering Yankee Stadium: An Oral and Narrative History of “The House That Ruth Built”

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* Review: The Celebrant

Classic title

From Weaver’s Tantrum, a blog that concentrates on the Baltimore Orioles, this review of Eric Rolfe Greenberg’s classic title.

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* Riddle me this

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

If the Yankees spend $180 million on a player but no one comes to the stadium to watch him — if people can’t afford the price of admission — does his play count? This piece in today’s New York Times takes a look back at what it was like for the national pastime during the […]

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* Hail to the chief

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

At least that’s what it seems like when teams have press conferences to show off their new acquisitions, such as the one today for the Yankees’ Mark Teixeira. With all due respect, what can these guys possibly have to say that warrants such attention? I just keep coming up the same old rote answers. (Warning: […]

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* Wait, Wait, tell me the truth

History

In keeping with the policy NPR seems to have about replaying its best bits during the week between Christmas and New Years, Wait Wait Don’t Tell Me, hosted by Peter Sagal, featured a few prominent guests from the “Not My Job” segment, including Sen. George McGovern, Leonard Nimoy, Garrison Keillor, Jimmy Carter of the singing […]

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* Remember Barry Bonds?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I’m including this one because the contributor of this essay is a published author (even if his main subject isn’t baseball). The subject of ethics has always intrigued me, so here’s one from John Marshall on “The baseball ethicist: Why nobody signed Barry Bonds.” Marshall is a professional ethicist, writer, lawyer and lifetime baseball enthusiast. […]

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* NPR (National Pastime Radio) starts the year off right

Ballparks / Stadiums

Speaking of NPR… Just happened to be flipping through the dial yesterday and came across The Brian Lehrer Show. Since it was a holiday, this was a highlights show, which included two segments on listeners’ memories of Shea and Yankee Stadiums, both of which closed with their team’s final home games in 2008.

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* Baseball from an odd source

2008 title

Let’s get this straight: I can’t stand Howard Stern, I find him a vulgar person. It’s my wife who enjoys him and his minions. So for Hanukka, I gave her a copy of Artie Lange’s new book Too Fat To Fish. I mention this only because he has an extensive section about how he and […]

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* MLB Network: A (very) early appraisal

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I know we’ve only just begun, but you know me: I have no filter. The first day of MLB Network was pretty much a disappointment, as far as I’m concerned. The opening hour-long show, featuring four talking heads (including Harold Reynolds, Al Leiter, and Barry Larkin) alternated with a replay of Don Larsen’s World Series […]

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* W2W4: Upcoming titles

2009 title

Been receiving some publisher’s catalogs recently. Here are a few 2009 titles to look forward to: >> As mentioned previously, Joe Torre and Tom Verducci have collaborated on the manager’s autobio, coming next month from Random House. >> Bloomsbury will release a behind-the-scenes look at the machinations of baseball’s Valhalla in Cooperstown Confidential: Heroes, Rogues, […]

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* Speaking of self-published

2008 title

It’s too late to attend the book signing, but not to let to learn about Dave Clark’s memoirs, Diamond in the Rough, published by iUniverse and written with Roger Neumann a reporter for the Corning (NY) Star-Gazette. Clark, who was afflicted by polio, pitched with the assistance of crutches. Now suffering from the effects of […]

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