Cringeworthy Clemens

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

60 Minutes is slated to air the Roger Clemens mia non-cupla segment on Jan. 6, but pundits are already weighing in with their opinions. Is this fair? Will it have the deleterious effect of prejudicing an audience that’s still on the fence? Here’s part of Jon Friedman’s take on Marketwatch.com: Would Clemens have consented to […]

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Author chronicles Mets 2007 debacle

Annoucements

Author Neil Spagna announced that the long awaited update to his award-winning first book, Welcome To Pottersville, will be published in hardcover to coincide with the beginning of the 2008 baseball season. Tentatively scheduled for an April 28 release date, the book will include insights on the September collapse of the New York Mets, the […]

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He's not the only one…

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

One blogger speaks for many when he reports that “Jose Canseco is getting on my nerves.”

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We have a winnah!

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Penguin Books, which usually lends itself to more prestigious fare, will publish Jose Canseco’s sequel, Vindicated, according to this brief from yesterday’s Publisher’s Weekly. Y’all can get some sleep now.

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RIP, Philip B. Dusenberry

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From The New York Times, Dec. 31 “Dusenberry was born on April 28, 1936, in Brooklyn, the eldest child of a cab driver. He attended Emory & Henry College, in Virginia, on a baseball scholarship, but he dropped out after the athletic program and his scholarship were discontinued….” “Mr. Dusenberry also dabbled in the film […]

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Lest we forget

Because I can...

At the end of each year, many magazines, newspapers, and TV shows devote some space/time to celebrities who passed away during the previous 12 months. Sad to say, I’m at the age where the incidence of those baseball figures I recall from my youth are heading for that great dugout in the sky. Among those […]

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David Halberstam

Older title

Although this piece from the NY Times Sunday Magazine is not baseball related, per se, David Halberstam, produced several well-received books on the game (with additional titles about other sports), including: October 1964 Summer of ’49 The Teammates: A Portrait of a Friendship It’s rare to find such a well-rounded writer, who can be so […]

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Books from unlikely authors

New title

Mel Didier was one of the countless players who rounded out a team’s roster. Never a star, or even a regular player for the most part, he remained in the game on the sidelines, as a coach and scout, so he has a few stories to tell, which he does in Podnuh, Let Me Tell […]

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Canseco's new book

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

I can’t remember which TV sports pundit said it, but it’s a good point: If the players Canseco has named so far haven’t taken PED, wouldn’t you think they’d have looked into civil suits? Well now it’s reported he’s going to name more athletes in his new book, Vindicated, which is due out in the […]

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Happy birthday, Sandy Koufax and Hank Greenberg

Bits and Pieces

Every time the High Holidays come around, you can be sure you’ll be reading stories about Sandy Koufax and Hank Greenberg, the two greatest Jewish baseball players of all time. Both refused to compromise their religious beliefs to play on Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year for Jews — Edgar Guest even penned […]

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This issue in Baseball Digest (Jan./Feb. 2008)

Magazines

COVER STORY: Deep in talent, Red Sox will be an imposing force again in 2008 Baseball Digest‘s all-star rookie team, by George Vass 2007 Player of the year: Phillies Jimmy Rollins, by John McMurray 2007 Pitcher of the year: Red Sox Josh Beckett, by Gordon Edes Baseball Profile: Devil Rays outfielder Carl Crawford, by Rick […]

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Happy birthday, Bill Lee

Bits and Pieces

The Spaceman turns 61 today. Books by or about Lee include: Baseball Eccentrics: The Most Entertaining, Outrageous, and Unforgettable Characters in the Game, with Jim Prime (Triumph, 2007) The Wrong Stuff, with Richard Lally (Paperback edition by Three Rivers Press, 2006) Have Glove, Will Travel: The Adventures of a Baseball Vagabond, with Richard Lally (Paperback […]

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Review: Branch Rickey, Baseball’s Ferocious Gentleman

Newspapers

From the Columbia (MO) Daily Tribune. Columbians might remember when Mr. Rickey collapsed on Nov. 13, 1965, as he was being inducted into the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame at the Daniel Boone Hotel and when he died on Dec. 9 at Boone County Hospital without regaining consciousness. Upshoot: “The reader does not have to […]

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The new free agents: Not who you think

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

The New York Times recently ran this article about sportswriters as the new breed of free agent, moving from publication to publication for higher and higher salaries. Rick Reilly recently left Sports Illustrated for ESPN The Magazine, while Dan Patrick did the reverse (think of it as a trade of two superstars). These are just […]

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McFarland, publisher of eclectic baseball titles

Annoucements

McFarland Publishers has a unique place in the world of baseball literature. Known for their eclectic academic work in the arts, sciences, humanities, etc. they also specialize in topics that might be considered extremely narrow in interest within the national pastime. In fact, it seems comfortable to say that if it were not for this […]

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No baseball titles on Times' "must-read" lists

Because I can...

Three book reviewers for The New York Times weigh in with their top choices of the year. Not much of a surprise that there are no baseball titles deemed worthy of inclusion (not even on their list of 100 Notable books for 2007.) I actually have a few of the titles listed, including Michael Chabon’s […]

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Yet another list…

Baseball movies

Film critic Richard Roeper’s best and worst baseball films of all time: Best (In order of preference) Worst (In alpha order*) The Natural The Babe Bull Durham The Babe Ruth Story Field of Dreams The Bad News Bears Go to Japan Bang the Drum Slowly The Fan Pride of the Yankees Fear Strikes Out Major […]

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If you ever wanted to know…

Because I can...

What, if anything, those rankings mean on Amazon.com or the Barnes and Noble site (BN.com) mean, read Carl Bialik’s March 23, ’07 column from his Wall Street Journal column, “The Numbers Guy.”  

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Author of We Are The Ship to appear at Negro Leagues Museum

Annoucements

In response to a recent entry on artist Kadir Nelson’s We Are the Ship, Bob Kendrick of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, Missouri, wanted readers of the Bookshelf to know that the museum will display a number of the original paintings used to illustrate the book in an exhibit beginning January 26, […]

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Clemens, on 60 Minutes, Con't.

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

From The New York Times, Dec. 25: Wallace, Fan of Clemens, Becomes His Questioner Hard to believe Wallace is 89. Wallace said Monday that he had already begun to map out the questions he wanted to ask Clemens. “Why would McNamee say these things he said?” said Wallace, a point that has been asked by […]

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