Review: Willie Mays: Art in the Outfield

New title

By Mike Shannon. The University of Alabama Press, 2007 The superstar player has always been considered an artist at his craft. Now it’s time for “real” artists to return the favor. And no one makes a more appropriate subject for such treatment than Willie Mays. This title is categorized as “Visual Arts/Sports History,” a very […]

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Review: The Glory Days: New York Baseball, 1947-57

New title

Edited by John Thorn, Collins, 2007. Don’t let the slim size of this elegant book fool you. Inspired by an exhibit sponsored by the Museum of the City of New York, with essays from some heavy hitters, The Glory Days recaptures a simpler time for baseball and the country. Ballplayers who lived in our neighborhoods, […]

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Here's your hat, what's your hurry?

Annoucements

Jose Canseco’s new project is having some difficulties.  

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In the Biz: Behind the scenes at Thomas Dunne Books with Joseph Rinaldi

Industry/Literary Analysis

A few months back, I had the opportunity to chat with Joseph Rinaldi, director publicity for Thomas Dunne Books (an imprint of St. Martin’s Press), on how his company picks its baseball titles and what works best in a discriminating, and relatively small readership. In 2007, TD released Ty and The Babe: Baseball’s Fiercest Rivals; […]

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Have a seat. This is going to take awhile.

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

A couple of entries ago, I pondered how experts in body language might assess Roger Clemens’ appearance on 60 Minutes. Ask and ye shall receive. Yesterday the Houston Chronicle published this piece, posted within hours of the segment, and today The New York Times did this one based on his Jan. 7 press conference. There […]

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Lee Lowenfish discusses his new book on Branch Rickey

Author Profile / interview

…in an in-depth interview on Brink.com. His exhaustive biography, subtitled The Ferocious Gentleman, was published earlier this year by the University of Nebraska Press and has been critically acclaimed by several sources.

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Happy birthday, Alvin Dark

Older title

The fiery manager whom Orlando Cepeda basically called anti-Hispanic for not letting Latin players speak their native language in the clubhouse and dugout, turns 86. Dark played for the Braves, Giants, Cardinals, Cubs, Phillies and Braves again in a 14-year career that spanned from 1946-60. As a manager, he led the Giants to a 1962 […]

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Well I'm glad that's all cleared up…

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

In a way I feel bad for Roger Clemens. In a sense, one of his comments on tonight’s 60 Minutes was right: America (or at least some of its baseball fans), have reached a point where it’s guilty until proven innocent. To my mind, Clemens did not convince me of his innocence. I wonder if […]

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Lest We Forget: Bill Kirwin

Because I can...

One of my first published pieces appeared in NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture. Off-hand, I can’t recall what it was other than that it was a book review. Although he didn’t know it, Bill sort of launched me on my second career as a writer. Buoyed by the confidence that comes with […]

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Lest We Forget…Gerald Astor

Because I can...

Gerald Astor, 81, Writer on Americans in Combat, Dies “After his wartime service, he received a bachelor’s degree from Princeton. He was the picture editor of Sports Illustrated in its early years and worked as an editor for Sport magazine, Look, The Saturday Evening Post and Time….Mr. Astor edited The Baseball Hall of Fame 50th […]

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The genie is out of the bottle

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

With the glut of books on baseball and steroids about to hit the bookstores, it would seem that writers have been aching for the Mitchell Report to come out. But as anyone who knows the publishing process will tell you, these projects are planned well in advance. Nevertheless, here’s another one, from the pen/typewriter/computer of […]

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Golenbock to pen Steinbrenner book

Annoucements

According to the Jan. 2 New York Observer, Peter Golenbock, whose most recent sexsationalized 7, his novel about Mickey Mantle drew near-unanimous scorn, has signed a contract with John Wiley & Sons to write a biography of increasingly uninvolved Yankees owner George Steinbrenner. The project has a working title of The Boss. “One wonders whether […]

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Museum exhibit, book chronicle pre-Rockies baseball in Colorado

History

From the Jan. 4 online edition of the Loveland, CO, Reporter-Herald: With the recent success of the Colorado Rockies, baseball in Colorado has gained a new level of interest and popularity. Yet, unbeknownst to many, baseball statewide achieved a high level of competitiveness as far back as the 1920s, at least at minor league levels. […]

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The more things change, the more they change

History

According to a story in the Chicago Sun Times, the Cubs have received permission from the City Council to add 70 “premium-priced ‘bullpen box seats’ along the third base line at Wrigley Field — and install new signage — to wring more revenue out of the 93-year-old ballpark.” City Hall approved the changes because “landmark […]

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Moneyball vs. Mitchell Report

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Revisiting the Michael Lewis opus, which the writer deems “the most influential book of what’s now officially baseball’s Steroids Era,” has become joined at the hip with the recent release of the Mitchell Report. In this article from Slate.com, Tom Scocca wonders if Billy Beane, general manager of the Oakland Athletics and the “protagonist” of […]

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First it was no injections, now, not so much

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

According to an Associated Press report, Roger Clemens admits to receiving injections…of painkillers and vitamins. Clemens made the admission during his 60 Minutes interview with Mike Wallace. The segment will be aired Sunday, jan. 6. During the CBS interview, recorded last Friday at Clemens’ home in Katy, Texas, Clemens was asked whether McNamee had injected […]

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The Futurama of baseball?

Because I can...

We’ll see. We’ll see.

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Book to tell the story of coach killed by line drive

Annoucements

According to The Media Mob column in the Jan. 2 edition of The New York Observer, SI writer S.L Price has signed a deal with Ecco, a Harper Collins imprint, to write the story of Mike Coolbaugh, a coach in the Colorado Rockies’ minor league system who was killed by a line drive while on […]

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Proving that you never know where inspiration will come from…

Older title

According to The Motley Fool Web site, Jimmy Buffett, baseball’s richest fan, takes his from a classic baseball title One key factor for Buffett’s success is his keen instinct to go only for investments where all the stars align; the no-brainer situations Buffett refers to as “the fat pitch.” Buffett has a simple explanation for […]

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How Potomac Books chooses its baseball titles

Industry/Literary Analysis

Potomac Books (formerly Brassey’s, Inc.) seems like an odd publisher for baseball titles. According to Kevin Cuddihy, an editor at the company, Potomac “has its roots in military history and has had a fair number of hits with political books.” The line of sports books began in 2000 and was the first “mainstream publisher of […]

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