Bits and pieces

2007 title

PinstripesPA reviews Haunted Baseball by Dan Gordon and Mickey Bradley, while Tailgatecrashers post this piece about The New Ballgame: Baseball Statistics for the Casual Fan, by Glenn Guzzo. As the days go by and more attention is paid to the use of amphetamines and other drugs associated with easing ADD/ADHD, Jim Bouton’s Ball Four will […]

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The ethics of friendship

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Of late, I have wondered about the ethics of friendship. I’ve been watching The Wire, a cop /newspaper drama in which people do questionable things for ostensibly noble purposes. In one episode, a superior officer chastises a patrolman for an unquestionably wrong act against a citizen who honked his horn at a crime scene. Although […]

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Review: Whatever Happened to "Super Joe"?

Older title

A review about former Cleveland Indians’ players during their dog days, from LetsgoTribe.com  

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Announcement: New book on minor leagues by Indians' former exec

2008 title

From the The Burlington (NC) Times News: Mark Cryan, the former general manager of the Burlington Indians, has written “Cradle of the Game: Baseball & Ballparks in North Carolina.” August Publications of Minneapolis is publishing the 400-page volume, which an August spokesman said is a comprehensive work “exploring minor-league and leading college ballparks” throughout the […]

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Clemens and Canseco: Together at Last?

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

An entry in the NY Daily News‘ “Subway Squawkers” blog connects the dots between Roger Clemens and Jose Canseco through excerpts from Juiced. As this evidence has not yet been released to the public, I don’t yet know how damning this is. What I do know is what Canseco wrote about Clemens in his book, […]

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You say it's your birthday..

Birthday greetings

Bill Veeck (Veeck as in Wreck, Thirty Tons a Day, and The Hustler’s Handbook, among others). A member of the Hall of Fame, Veeck was an innovator on a number of levels, always beleiving the fans’ enjoyment should come first. Perhaps that’s why he was so unpopular with his fellow owners. John Kruk, author of […]

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Lest we forget: Karl Ehrhardt, The Sign Man

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Karl Ehrhardt was a fixture at Shea Stadium for much of the 1960s and 1970s. Fans marveled how quickly he could hoist a placard just right for the situation on the field. He passed away at the age of 83. The Times wrote this profile of him just two years ago.  

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Announcement: Author of First Class Citizenship on C-SPAN2's Book TV

Annoucements

“Michael Long has collected the personal correspondences of Jackie Robinson in First Class Citizenship: The Civil Rights Letters of Jackie Robinson. From Robinson’s integration of major league baseball, to his involvement in the civil rights movement and national politics, his letters reflect the political landscape of the fifties and sixties. Jackie Robinson’s correspondents included many […]

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From Newsweek.com: Baseball's Other Drug Problem

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Written by Charles Euchner, author of The Last Nine Innings,Little League: Big Dreams: Inside the Hope, the Hype, and the Glory of the Greatest World Series Ever Played, and Playing the Field: Why Sports Teams Move and Cities Fight to Keep Them.Upshot: “Are players using an ADD diagnosis to evade the amphetamine ban?” Powered by […]

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Baseball, a la Norman Rockwell

Artist profile

Execrpted from an entry on darkmattermag.com: “When I was young, I collected autographs of active and retired baseball players using a book that actually listed their home addresses. This book even had addresses for old umpires, including the umpire depicted in the center of Rockwell’s painting, “Beans” Reardon. So, I have a small reproduction of […]

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Political waffling once again

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Politicians will say anything for your support. Look at Hillary Clinton, claiming to be a lifelong fan of several franchises, including the Cubs and the Yankees. Topps commemorates former presidential hopeful — and devout Yankee fan — Rudy Giuliani with a “faux card,” according to this item posted Feb. 5 by Sports Illustrated. On the […]

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In honor of Black History Month

Reference

In 1997, I wrote the following annotated bibliography about the integration of baseball for the MultiCultural Review, reproduced here in honor of Black History Month. It should be noted that there have been several additional books published during the interim on both African-American players and the Negro Leagues, including three biographies about Curt Flood, and […]

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* Reviews in BookPage

Older title

One of my first regular gigs was writing an annual baseball book roundup for BookPage, a monthly publication available at libraries and bookstores. These, along with single reviews, appeared from 1998-2004 (still can’t quite figure out what happened to that). Anyway, thanks to my new toy from Issuu.com, I was able to make a nice […]

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Call for Papers

Annoucements

Editor Ron Briley is seeking manuscripts for an anthology on “Baseball and Politics” to be published by McFarland & Company. The recent front page newspaper coverage of the Barry Bonds indictment for perjury indicates that the interest in and impact of baseball extends well beyond the playing field. This collection will focus upon the intersection […]

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So you wanna be a sportswriter?

Annoucements

Received this e-mail from Dugoutcentral.com: DugoutCentral is pleased to announce that the winners of its Spring Training Writing Contest will receive free, one-on-one consulting with esteemed writing coach Susan White for the first half of the 2008 MLB season. For those fan writers who are serious about improving their skills, this is a unique opportunity.Susan […]

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I have an Issuu (but not, apparently, with WordPress)

Because I can...

You’ll have to trust me on this (because WordPress is very unfriendly to us poorer bloggers and doesn’t make adding technologically-hip features easy, if possible at all). By clicking the “open publication” button below, you will be able to read a sample of a SABR Bibliography Committee newsletter. The concept, from Issuu.com,  is kind of […]

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Welcome to the party, Wall Street Journal

Industry/Literary Analysis

It’s taken more than 100 years, but according to this article in the Jan. 29 New York Times, the Wall Street Journal will finally sully its reputation by incorporating sports coverage within its august pages. Mr. Murdoch says he wants The Journal to expand nonbusiness coverage, especially in areas like politics, government and entertainment, while […]

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HarperCollins' turnaround

Industry/Literary Analysis

After a shaky first quarter, the publishing giant made a nice comeback, posting a 3.3 percent sales increase for the period ending December 31. HC has published dozens of noteworthy titles, including, just to name a few The Story of Baseball: Third Revised and Expanded Edition, by Lawrence Ritter Clearing the Bases: Juiced Players, Monster […]

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Get well soon, Jim Palmer

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

According to an AP report, Hall of Fame pitcher Jim Palmer was awarded $890,000 for a botched cataract surgery. That such make his recovery a little easier to take. In 1996, Palmer wrote about his sometimes stormy relationship with his manager, Earl Weaver. Publisher’s Weekly called the book “a fast-moving and witty account” of their […]

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Mini-Review: Hank Aaron and The Home Run That Changed America

Older title

Keeping to the Hank Aaron theme: For more than 20 years, Hank Aaron quietly went about his work, doing all the things that Mantle and Mays did, but with less media attention. That is, until he came within striking distance of the most prestigious record in baseball: Babe Ruth’s 714 lifetime home runs. The two […]

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