* Playing catch up, part 1

Commentary by Ron Kaplan

Been a bit remiss in recent weeks, so trying to catch up with a roundup of items: BaseballFarming.com offers a list of “Baseball Books to Love,” which includes fiction and non-fiction titles. Prior to 2008, baseball didn’t have to sully itself with official instant replay, but since it did, might as well bone up on […]

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* Torre autobio update

2009 title

Random House is scheduled to release The Yankee Years, Joe Torre’s autobiography (written with SI‘s Tom Verducci), in early February, 2009.

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* Maddux calls it quits

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Greg Maddux, perhaps this generation’s greatest pitcher, announced that he will officially retire at the upcoming winter meetings. We’ve heard an awful lot about Roger Clemens, recently for all the wrong reasons. I’m willing to bet that Maddux is no choir boy, but he went about his work without the bluster and bravado of a […]

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* Mets make schocking managerial announcement

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Rather than giving Jerry Manuel another shot at the helm of the disappointing Mets, whose collapse over the last two season borders on the epic, the front office announced there will be a new sheriff in town as the Mets move into their new home. The new manager, identified only as “Wally,” appears with new […]

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* With fingers crossed…

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The Hall of Fame veterans Committee will announce any decision on Monday, Dec. 8. Players who are under consideration include: SINCE 1943 • Dick Allen • Gil Hodges • Jim Kaat • Tony Oliva • Al Oliver • Vada Pinson • Ron Santo • Luis Tiant • Joe Torre • Maury Wills PRE-1943 • Bill […]

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* This week (Dec. 1) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Tom Verducci’s article on Mike Mussina, future possible, maybe, who knows Hall-of-Famer. Ben Reiter’s piece on heavy hurlers

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* Review: Rumor in Town

Biography

Mike Lynch, who hosts the always thought-provoking Seamheads.com, penned (keyboarded?) this review of Babe Dahlgren’s biography. The twist? It was written by Dahlgren’s grandson, Matt, who is seeking to exonerate charges that Gramps was on the weed as a player.

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* NPR blinded me with science

Audio

How did the Brooklyn Dodgers get their name? According to a recent edition of NPR’s Studio 360, you can thank Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, who were battling it out to see whose system of electricity would prevail. Mike Daisey narrated a segment on “Tesla vs. Edison”: There was a trolley running in Brooklyn on […]

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* Mike Mussina, supergenius

2008 title

Allen Barra cites Rob Neyer in this Wall Street Journal piece about the just-retired pitcher. He should have gotten John Feinstein, too, while he was at it.

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* Review: Asian Pacific Americans and Baseball: A History

Asian baseball

BaseballBookReview ran this piece on the Joel S. Franks book.

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* Simply the best

2008 title

Spitball Magazine just announced the finalists for the 2008 CASEY Award, Almost a Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the 1980 Phillies, by William Kashatus (University of Pennsylvania Press) Neil Leifer: Ballet in the Dirt: The Golden Age of Baseball, by Neil Leifer (Taschen) (See here for samples.) Baseball’s Greatest Hit: The Story of “Take […]

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* Insomnia vs. nightmares: The lesser of two evils

Movies

Because I’m such a nice guy, I’ve taken to staying up late. Seems I snore — quite loudly, although I deny it — and it’s bugging the hell out of my family. So I give them a “grace period” so they can get to sleep before I come up. It’s not so bad. I get […]

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* Author profile: Bill Nowlin

Author Profile / interview

From the Red Sox component of MLB.com, this profile of Nowlin, who not only writes about the team, but founded Rounder Records, which specializes in Folk-type stuff.

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* What to give…

2008 title

The Chicago Sun-Times recently offered a list of gift books, as comprised by some of its writers. Of the seven suggestions, Two baseball titles made the grade: Babe Ruth: Remembering the Bambino in Stories, Photos and Memorabilia, by Julia Ruth Stevens and Bill Gilbert; and Remembering Yankee Stadium: An Oral and Narrative History of “The […]

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* Review: Pinch Hitter

2008 title

From bloggernews.net, this review by Simon Barrett of Dean Whitney’s new novel. Upshot: I really like Dean Whitney’s story telling approach, he has taken a subject that obviously he knows a great deal about and managed to make it appeal to non baseball fans. He takes the time to explain the terminology and strategy of […]

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* What did you do over your winter vacation, Chad Qualls?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The Arizona Diamondbacks’ pitcher got involved in a literacy program in his hometown. Qualls, a Narbonne High graduate who is spending the off-season in Redondo Beach, helped pass out free books as part of a school spirit day focused on encouraging students to start reading.

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* "Sarge" turns author

2008 title

Another former player turns (co)author in Phillies Confidential: The Untold Story of the 2008 Championship Season. (How anything of importance remains untold in this day and age is a mystery.) Matthews — not to be confused with teammate Gary “The Secretary of State” Maddox — was with the team from 1981-83, thereby missing the last […]

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* At the risk of tooting my own horn…

2008 title

Thirteen years in the making. In 1995, I delivered my first “scholarly paper.” It was at Hoftsra University’s centennial celebration of Babe Ruth’s birth and it was a hoot. I spent three days there, listening to all sorts of presentations, visiting exhibits and finally — nervously — making my own. My topic was “The Books […]

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* Stocking stuffer: Gandhi at the Bat

Baseball movies

If Neil Leifer’s new football book is out of your league, consider Gandhi at the Bat. The short “mockumentary” by Stephanie Argy and Alec Boehm, based on an original short story by Chet Williamson, won the Award for Excellence in Filmmaking at the Baseball Hall of Fame Film Festival in September for excellence “in direction, […]

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* Well, that can't be good.

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

“…Houghton Mifflin Harcourt has asked its editors to stop buying books.” Look for other publishers to follow suit. And we all know where baseball/sports books fall on the foot chain.

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