Baseball Card Awards: The Gummies

Bits and Pieces

Since we’re heading into awards season, this seemed appropriate:The Gummies, picking the best and worst baseball card-related items of the year. Unfortunately, there’s no explanation for the picks, nor a list of the other nominees that were in the running.

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Review: First Class Citizenship: The Civil Rights Letters of Jackie Robinson

2007 title

Edited by Michael G. Long. Times Books, 2007. By now, everyone — baseball fan or not — knows what a remarkable man Jackie Robinson was. In addition to his superior ability on the diamond and the responsibilities inherent in being the first African-American to break baseball’s notorious color line, he continued his work for civil […]

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Happy Birthday, Ray Chapman

Bits and Pieces

A sad reminder of a man cut down in the prime of life, the only major leaguer to die as a result of an injury sustained on the field. Chapman was hit in the head by submariner Carl Mays on August 16, 1920. His story was chronicled in The Pitch That Killed, written in 1989 […]

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Lest We Forget: Don Cardwell

Lest We Forget

I first really started getting into baseball in 1966; my first live game was aday camp trip where the Mets played the San Francisco Giants. Still have the scroecard in the attic. Don Cardwell was one of those “old”players. Regardless of his age — and he was only 31-34 during his years with the Mets […]

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Oxymoron: Sports experts?

Because I can...

At the risk of appearing heretical, this may seem like a football piece, but it applies to the sports broadcasting industry as a whole. Over the weekend, the local all-news radio station predicted 4-6 inches of snow from Sunday night into Monday morning. My daughter was excited at the possibility of a snow day or, […]

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Lest We Forget: Johnny Podres

Older title

Podres, who pitched the deciding game in the 1955 Fall Classic to give the Brooklyn Dodgers their only World Championship, passed away this weekend at the age of 75. Richard Goldstein’s obituary in the Jan. 14 New Yorks Times, notes his place in the hearts that borough’s baseball fans. Look in any retrospective of the […]

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Lest We forget: Larry Whiteside

Bits and Pieces

Larry Whiteside, one of the first African-American beat wrietrs to cover a team on a daily basis, died Jan. 11. at the age of 69. He had been a member of the Boston Globe staff since 1973 and wrote for papers in Kansas City and Milwaukee as well. Whiteside was posthumously elected the 2008 winner […]

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Book Review: Fantasyland

Older title

From sox1fan.com. The book’s official site.

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NY Times questions for Buzz Bissinger

Author Profile / interview

“Stray questions for: Buzz Bissnger,” Jan. 11, 2008. Bissinger, of course, is the author of 3 Nights in August, an in-depth look at the managerial style of St. Louis Cardinals skipper Tony LaRussa.

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Baseball Review: Baseball Hacks

Older title

Haven’t seen too many reviews on this one, which is statistics/ computer-oriented, so I thought to include it for those who are into this genre. From Blogcritics.org. In fact, most of the book seems to be available online, thanks to Google Books.

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What One (or so) Book: Jim Callis, executive editor, Baseball America

Bits and Pieces

Matt Bishoff, Darysbay.com (A Tampa Bay Rays blog): What is your favorite baseball-related book and who is your favorite baseball writer? Jim Callis: Just one baseball book? That’s tough! I’m going to have to throw out a few, and I’m sure I’m missing some obvious ones. My favorites would include the Bill James Baseball Abstracts, […]

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Greatest sports book of '07? One man's opinion

2007 title

And not this one. Mind you, The Stark Truth was definitely interesting and thought-provoking, but the best? anyway, Tom Morgan of the Connecticut-based Voices newspaper chain thinks so.  

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Mel Didier, ex-Expo

2007 title

Since my mother’s family comes from Montreal, I’ve always considered it a second home. So while you fans up north were ignoring Nos Amors, forcing them to move to DC, I was always fascinated with the team, especially since all the written material came out in both French and English versions. Very cool. I still […]

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The Casey Award

Classic title

The CASEY Award was inaugurated in 1983 by Mike Shannon and W.J. Harrison, the editors and co-founders of Spitball: The Literary Baseball Magazine, to honor the authors and publishers of outstanding baseball books, a heretofore unrealized notion. Seven books were named as finalists for the first CASEY: Baseball’s Greatest Experiment, The Celebrant, Hoopla, Invisible Men, […]

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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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