Barricade Books goes Chap. 11

Industry/Literary Analysis

From today’s e-mail Publisher’s Weekly: “Citing mounting costs from three libel suits, Barricade Books filed for bankruptcy earlier this month in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.” Barricade was the publisher for Shakespeare on Baseball: Such Time-Beguiling Sport,  edited by David Goodnough, released in 2000. Here’s what Shakespeare knew about baseball, […]

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Today's audio selection: Why I Love Baseball

Audio

by Larry King; read by the author. This is one of those cases where having the author read his own work doesn’t (work, that is). When speaking extemporaneously, King is a fine entertainer. But reading from a script makes him sound like, well, he’s reading from a script, reporting someone else’s memories, rather than his […]

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Ghosts in the (sports) machine?

Author profile/interview by Ron Kaplan

Dan Gordon and Mickey Bradley would love it if instead of candy, you handed out copies of their new book Haunted Baseball: Ghosts, Curses, Legends, and Eerie Events. Gordon said in an e-mail interview that timing is everything. The publishers — The Lyons Press — released the book a few weeks ago, to take advantage […]

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Congratulations, Boston

Newspapers

While trolling around to read British coverage of the Oct. 28 Giants-Dolphins game played in London, I came across this piece from the Telegraph. Newseum.org is a great source for how papers across the world handle their cover stories. Once in awhile, they have special “issues.” In honor of the Sox’ series victory, they’ve put […]

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Ah yes, I remember it well.

Industry/Literary Analysis

In the quarterly issue of The New York Times’ Play Magazine, Bryan Curtis, the supplement’s media columnist, opines on the genre of sports star memoir/autobiography. “Run your eyes over my bookshelf, and next to Melville, Stendhal and Colette, you’ll find Bouton, Meggyesy and Canseco,” he writes crediting them as “among the intellectually adventurous athletes who […]

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Fall reading

New title

My annual fall feature from Bookreporter.com.

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Today's audio selection: Baseball: A History of America's Favorite Game

Audio

Written by George Vecsey, narrated by Alan Nebelthau (unabridged) In a Fall 2006 feature I did for Bookreporter.com, I wrote: Veteran columnist George Vecsey offers a quick recap of historical highlights of the national pastime in BASEBALL: A HISTORY OF AMERICA’S FAVORITE GAME. The slim volume — a mere 250-plus pages — barely touches on […]

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Big league poetry

Nostalgia

To be honest, I don’t “get” poetry, for the most part. But poetry does go into books, and books do go onto my bookshelf so… From Poetryfoundation.org, Levi Stahl’s feature article on “Baseball and Verse, from Tinker to Evers to Big Papi.” More baseball poems, courtesy of the Foundation: Tao in the Yankee Stadium Bleachers, […]

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Audiobooks: The Echoing Green

Audio

When it comes to listening to books, I prefer unabridged versions, especially if I haven’t read the book book. That way I don’t have to worry about what I might be missing from the printed page. I also appreciate the efforts made, in most cases, by the authors to do their own narration. After all, […]

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You never know what you'll find…

Memorabilia

From the Truman State University (Kirksville, Missouri ) Web site: Book exchange piles up the unexpected: The double glass doors of Eddie’s Book Exchange open a wormhole to the past. Stacks of yellowing volumes line the narrow corridors, antiques fill the dusty  glass cases and rows of oil paintings cover the walls. Owner Karl Hildebrand […]

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With God on our side

Commentary

Another piece from Slate.com about the Rockies, who caused a star awhile back because of  their penchant for looking heavenward for strength. While the piece, a reprint from 2000, looks primarily at football, the subject of religion applies across sports lines. It also links to the Rockies’ “emphasis on Christianity first reported by USA Today […]

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Moneyball: You can't swing a dead cat…

Older title

…without some writer referring to the Michael Lewis book on effective baseball business management to explain how a given team was put together in an conventionial way. Here’s the latest, on the Rockies, from Slate.com.

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This week (October 29) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

This week features the NBA preview, which sets an All-Star precedent by listing the sport’s luminaries in height order. The lone baseball feature is “The Possible Dream,” a World Series preview by Tom Verducci, with a sidebar from Joe Sheehan of Baseball Prospectus. Two other items on baseball: Whither the Yankees now that Joe Torre […]

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New Title: The Splendid Splinter

Reviews from other sources

Read the review from the Washington Post here. Ha, Ha. You thought it was a book a Ted Williams, didn’t you? The author must have been a baseball fan with a sense of irony.

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Switching sides

Industry/Literary Analysis

Rick Reilly, formerly of Sports Illustrated, will now be working for ESPN. This comes on the heels of the announcement that Dan Patrick, formerly of ESPN, will now be working fo SI, which will also receive a writer to be named later. Reilly will reportedly receive $2 million per year, but declined to elaborate. “I’m […]

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Well, that explains everything: Cleveland Indians edition

Commentary

Here is the real reason the Indians lost to the Red Sox from a random cross section of  sources. From Poynter.org From King Kaufman on Salon.com From the Christian Science Monitor From Maine Today From Wikipedia

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Baseball and instant replay: Is it about time?

Commentary

In an op-ed piece in Street & Smith’s SportsBusiness Journal of Oct. 22-28, Eldon L. Ham, an adjunct professor of sports law and society at Chicago-Kent College of Law, argues persuasively about “An indisputable need for replay.” Replay opponents steadfastly argue that baseball is a 162-game marathon, not a sprint, and therefore all its imperfections […]

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Well, that explains everything: Chicago Cubs edition

New title

A Chicago Tavern:A Goat, a Curse, and the American Dream by Rick Kogan Well, the Cubs failed — again — to make it to the World Series. Naturally it was the billy goat’s fault. Rick Kogan tells the whole sorry, and sometimes, confusing story in A Chicago Tavern. But what it really comes down to […]

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Red Sox books, and then some

Older title

Now that the Sox are back in the Fall Classic, speculation is rampant over the effect this will have on the publishing industry. The year after the 2004 World Series victory — the team’s first in more than 85 years, David Green published 101 Reasons to Love the Red Sox: And 10 Reasons to Hate […]

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Here's to the winners

Newspapers

So does this mean a new glut of books on the Sox? Or has that ship sailed, only worthy of the 2004 Championship?       And let us not forget the Rockies, who make their first appearance in the Fall Classic. From Time magazine on Oct. 16 and Oct. 29. Interestingly, the Rocky Mountain […]

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