* Another list, from Baseball-Reference

Lists

The Bullpen section of Baseball-Reference.com (“Baseball’s collaborative encyclopedia”) published this list of 130 books (with links) that deal with baseball. Not sure of the criteria or why that specific number, but it’s there for the browsing.

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* Eddie Ciccotte, reincarnate

History

Andrea Weaver hosts a tribute site for David Strathairn, the actor who portrayed the knuckle-balling White Sox pitcher in Eight Men Out. She devotes an entire page to his accomplishments as an actor and surprisingly convincing athlete. Factoid: Strathairn’s sone, Tery, played the role of Bucky, one of the little kids who idolized the Sox […]

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* "Boo" to our neighbors to the North

Reviews from other sources

The Toronto Globe and Mail published what I assume is a roundup of baseball books that includes Vindicated. It’s hard to tell because YOU CAN’T READ IT UNLESS YOU BUY IT. What kind of nonsense is that? Shame, shame. G&M.

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* For the younger fans

Mini-reviews

ReadingRockets.org, “a national multimedia project offering information and resources on how young kids learn to read, why so many struggle, and how caring adults can help,” offered these suggestions for kids.

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* Baseball review roundup: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

2008 title

This collection of mini-reviews includes: Anatomy of Baseball The Good, The Bad & The Ugly: Pittsburgh Pirates Almost a Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the 1980 Phillies Ty Cobb: Safe at Home Keeping Score Change Up: An Oral History of 8 Key Events That Shaped Baseball

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* A visit with Bill Werber

Author Profile / interview

Eric Seidman takes a break from his statistical analysis to interview Bill Werber, the 99-year-old former New York Yankee and author Reading the piece, I couldn’t help but wonder as to the accuracy of the tales told by the ex-ballplayer. Thanks a lot, Rob Neyer. Nevertheless, Seidman does a sensitive job. The Amazon Report on […]

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* The "return" of Bobby V.

Movies

To the consciousness of New York fans, that is. Former Mets’ manager Bobby Valentine was the subject of the May 4 “Questions for…” section of the New York Times‘ Sunday Magazine. Q; One American tradition you’ve imported to Japan is patting the players on the tush, as the film demonstrates. A: That has really been […]

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* Twilight time

Television

In the previous entry on Jose Canseco, I included a story from the original Twilight Zone series. Since there are no new stories, the familiar theme of a man thrust back into an alternate universe was repeated for the umpteenth time. Here, in Extra Innings, from one of the program’s later incarnations, Marc Singer plays […]

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* Vindicated once more

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

After a lull, Jose Canseco is back in the news after he defaulted on his mortgage and his home was foreclosed. Poor Jose, but look on the bright side. This can be fodder for his next book. a paranoic, conspiracy theory about how the baseball establishment ruined him for daring to speak “the truth.” Anyway, […]

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* The Anatomy lesson

2008 title

The Anatomy of Baseball anthology is getting a good deal of press these days. Here’s a critique from the National Sports Review. It’s also included in this Boston Globe roundup, which includes an interewsting and unusual collection of titles, such as Sort of Gone: Poems by Sarah Freligh ; The 33-Year-Old Rookie: How I Finally […]

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* Bits and pieces

2008 title

Time to play catch-up again. From Great Britain’s Guardian, this article about Billy Beane and the Moneyball phenomenon. Why on earth would it appear in a British paper? Because Beane is “Tottenham Hotspur fanatic, as well as a fan of the team’s coach, Sir Alex Ferguson. A list of recommended baseball novels from the Campaign […]

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* More on Neyer

2008 title

A few more links to interviews with/features on Rob Neyer, author of the eponymous Big Book of Baseball Legends. From Viva ElBirdos, a Q&A And another from one of my favorites, The Baseball Analysts

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* Continuing the "essential" theme

Lists

Several bloggers have weighed in on the Bronx Banter’s theme of essential (not greatest or best) baseball books, including: Brew Crew Ball Steve Rubio’s Online Life Baseball Mud Nothing earth-shattering here, just some more lists, FYI.

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* Speaking of deconstruction: Lost and baseball

Uncategorized

Two of my favorite things are baseball and Lost. Last night’s episode puts the two together: Jack’s annoyance that the Yankees had swept his beloved Red Sox in a series: This was part of the latest column on the show on the Entertainment Weekly Web site, and is sort of apropos to my review of […]

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* Author video interview: Jonah Keri

Author Profile / interview

The editor of Baseball Between the Numbers interviewed by Authors@Google last July. [vodpod id=ExternalVideo.527325&w=425&h=350&fv=%26rel%3D0%26border%3D0%26]

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

2008 title

The Truth, The Lies, and Everything Else, Fireside, 2008. [vodpod id=ExternalVideo.527231&w=425&h=350&fv=%26rel%3D0%26border%3D0%26] from youtube.com I have been meaning to review this one for awhile but a comment submitted by a Bookshelf reader about Fay Vincent’s We Would Have Played for Nothing prodded me to get the lead out. “BaseballinDC” wrote: Re the Vincent book. These are […]

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* Lest we forget: Buzzie Bavasi

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The former general manager for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Dodgers passed away May 1 at the age of 93. According to Richard Goldstein’s obituary in The New York Times: In his 18 years with the Dodgers, from 1951 to 1968, Bavasi’s clubs won eight National League pennants and four World Series championships, including the […]

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* Nailing it

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Awhile back it was announced that Lenny Dylstra was working on a lifestyle magazine aimed at former professional athletes which would also purportedly help them manage their finances. Not so fast. According to this piece in the New York Post, there’s trouble a-brewing’.

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* Now we're talkin'

Classic title

I came across these posts from The Bronx Banter portion of The Baseball Toaster and The Hardball Times that cut to the chase of what The Bookshelf is all about. Alex Belth, who writes Bronx Banter, got the ball rolling, in response to a query he received from Phillyburbs.com regarding his suggestions for “ten essential […]

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* NPR Update: Gary Carter on The Leonard Lopate Show

2008 title

Hall of Fame catcher Gary Carter on making the talk-show circuit, chatting up his new book, Still a Kid at Heart: My Life in Baseball and Beyond (Triumph). Yesterday, it was WNYC’s Leonard Lopate Show. A few observations: Not to be cynical or curmudgeonly — Carter strikes me as genuinely nice — but listen to […]

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