Baseball and book publishing, part 2

Industry/Literary Analysis

A while ago, I linked to this entry about why baseball and book publishing are alike. Here’s another take on the subject from the Issues in Publishing blog. In brief, the host, Fran Toolan remarks on : The analogy of authors as ‘players’. This fits on many levels. Authors have agents, players have agents. Authors […]

Read the full article →

Bill James' reach extends beyond baseball

Author Profile / interview

Paul Campos, a law professor at the University of Colorado and writer for Scripps Howard News Service, wrote this piece about the living legacy of Bill James. Not only did his books change the way fans and executives think about baseball, but his greater themes can apply to other issues. Some of the central themes […]

Read the full article →

Video/audio excerpt: Luckiest Man

Audio

Actor Edward Herrmann made almost as unlikely a baseball player in A Love Affair: The Eleanor and Lou Gehrig Story, a 1978 made-for-TV movie as Tony Perkins did in Fear Strikes Out, but he makes an excellent narrator on Jonathan Eig’s 2005 biography of the Iron Horse. Here’s a slide show/audio excerpt from the book: […]

Read the full article →

(G)lovely art

Memorabilia

This piece from the Berkshire Eagle is a bit old, but the concept is still interesting. I’d love to get one of thee for my home. Here’s a look at the finished products. Unfortunately, I don’t get a sense of just how big these things are. Would it fit on a bookshelf? Or are closer […]

Read the full article →

What took so long, Joe?

Annoucements

The Canadian Press reported yesterday that “Joe Torre to recall his New York Yankees years in planned memoir.” The book, currently untitled, will be co-authored by Sports Illustrated’s Tom Verducci and will include Torre’s memories of the Yankees, with whom he won four World Series championships, and general thoughts on the game. Doubleday, an imprint […]

Read the full article →

Road Trip

Older title

Jack Kerouac’s On the Road celebrated its 50th anniversary in September, an event feted by re-releases of the watershed oeuvre and other events. According to Bloomberg.com: The New York Public Library offers an exhibition of Kerouaciana that includes about 60 feet of the scroll unrolled in a long display case, numerous notebooks, a fantasy baseball […]

Read the full article →

Hi ho, Miller … away?

Television

Dennis Miller is not for everyone. His style can bit a bit smarmy, condescending, loquacious, whatever. But give him credit; the man doesn’t know the meaning of the word quit (probably one of the few he doesn’t know). Despite a disastrous term on Monday Night Football, Miller recently launched his latest series, Sports Unfiltered, which […]

Read the full article →

RIP, Mickey Rutner

Fiction

Mickey Rutner, the oldest Jewish ex-major leaguer, passed away Oct. 17. Rutner, 87, was the real-life inspiration for Elliot Asinof’s baseball novel, Man On Spikes. During the past season, Rutner was still working part-time for the Red Rock Express. His job, he said in n interview conducted less than a month before he died, was […]

Read the full article →

This week (Nov. 12) in Sports Illustrated

Uncategorized
Read the full article →

Studs Terkel should have done a baseball book, too

Author Profile / interview

One of my favorite writers is Studs Terkel. He reminds me of a reverse Johnny Appleseed: instead of going around spreading, he collected stories from people from all walks of life about all sorts of subjects. A lifelong Cubs fan, Terkel, who turned 95 in May, appeared as the sportswriter Hugh Fullerton in the movie […]

Read the full article →

Today's audio selection: Game of Shadows

Audio

Bonds, BALCO, & the Steroids Scandal that Rocked Professional Sports, By Mark  Fainaru-Wada and Lance Williams, read by Scott Brick (Unabridged) Listen here: Bonds has said he would boycott the Hall of Fame if they displayed his 756th home run ball defaced with an asterisk. Pardon the Interruption hosts Tony Kornheiser and Michael Wilbon are […]

Read the full article →

Simon and Schuster loves baseball

Industry/Literary Analysis

From today’s Publisher’s Weekly e-mail: Simon & Schuster is committing to saving the Earth, or at least a few of its trees. The publisher has made a public commitment to use more environmentally friendly paper, a move which will, according to its calculations, save 483,000 trees every year. All of which means there will be […]

Read the full article →

Kevin Costner on baseball

Audio

NPR’s Fresh Air replayed this May 2007 interview with Costner to mark the release of his latest movie, Mr. Brooks, on DVD. The interviewer is with Dave Davies. Costner discusses his love for the game (not coincidentally the title of his trilogy of baseball films; and no, The Upside of Anger, in which he plays […]

Read the full article →

Jon Stewart: I'd rather be Wright…

Television

NY Mets third baseman had a so-so guest shot on the Oct. 31 Daily Show. (Sorry, but I  could embed the video directly.) I guess the folks at TDS were planning for the writers’ strike; Wright’s appearance is scheduled to re-air tonight (Nov. 5).

Read the full article →

Today's audio selections

Audio

Babe: The Legend Comes to Life, By Robert Creamer, narrated by Tom Parker (Unabridged) Listen here: The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe , by Leigh Montiville, narrated by Scott Brick (Unabridged) Listen here: These two biographies, written about 30 years apart, have one thing in common besides their subject matter: Both are […]

Read the full article →

A little perspective please

Newspapers

Lifted from the Wall Street Journal‘s daily “Opinion Journal”: Wannabe Pundits OK, see if you can guess the topic of a column by Lee Benson of Salt Lake City’s Deseret Morning News. It begins as follows: The financial news from the front–the president wants another $196 billion for wars that have already cost $600 billion–is […]

Read the full article →

Speaking of "Casey"

Uncategorized

A previous entry on baseball poetry failed to include this item on “Casey at the Bat” from the OneMinuteReviews blog.

Read the full article →

Today's audio selections: Baseball and The Greatest Generation

Audio

Baseball in ’41, by Robert Creamer, narrated by Tom Parker (Unabridged) Hear an excerpt: When the Boys Came Back: Baseball in 1946, by Frederick Turner, narrated by Brian Emerson (Unabridged) Hear an excerpt: These books span the WWII years from an interesting angle. Creamer’s book is a foreshadowing, examining the year of The Streak and […]

Read the full article →

This week (Nov. 5, 2007) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

As it should be expected, the World Series gets cover treatment in Tom Verducci’s “Party’s Just Beginning.” The only other baseball item is the state of the Yankees now that Joe Torre has left the building.

Read the full article →

Bits and pieces

Bits and Pieces

From the Norwood, Mass. Daily News Transcript, this “expose” about the Red Sox’ theme song, “Dirty Water.” Few know the song was written by a band from Los Angeles in the 1960s, and even fewer the incredible journey the song took before it was resurrected as the Red Sox victory anthem in 1998 following a […]

Read the full article →
script type="text/javascript"> var _gaq = _gaq || []; _gaq.push(['_setAccount', 'UA-5496371-4']); _gaq.push(['_trackPageview']); (function() { var ga = document.createElement('script'); ga.type = 'text/javascript'; ga.async = true; ga.src = ('https:' == document.location.protocol ? 'https://ssl' : 'http://www') + '.google-analytics.com/ga.js'; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(ga, s); })();