Why book publishing is like baseball

Industry/Literary Analysis

According to The Oregonian (Oct. 21). The book game is not unlike the system baseball uses to cultivate new talent. It’s called the minor leagues, and the objective is to discover who can “play” at a higher level and who can’t. If you substitute the word “sell” for “play,” you have the fiction business in […]

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Joe Torre, auteur

New title

Don’t cry for Joe, Argentina. According to Rich Shapiro’s column in the Oct. 20, NY Daily News, the sky’s the limit for the ex-Yankee skipper: He gets paid up to $100,000 for each speech he delivers, and he could land a big contract as a sports broadcaster. He also has penned two books. A third […]

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Review: The Card

Reviews from other sources

From Gelf.com, this review on the ongoing lust for a little piece of old cardboard. “In the last 15 years, sports-card collecting has been pulled in two opposite directions. The mainstream fan has lost interest in The Hobby, as it’s known. But the hard-core collectors have kept bidding up the most-valuable, rarest memorabilia. And nothing […]

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Author Profile: Richard Grossinger

Author profile/interview by Ron Kaplan

Beyond the Sports Page The 2007 season ended not with a bang, but with a whimper as the New York Mets frittered away a seven-game National League Eastern Division lead with 17 games to play. Years from now, how will fans recall the events of this major disappointment? If they are as thoughtful as author […]

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"Torre resigns; book at 11"

Uncategorized

So how long will it be until some publishing house signs the ex-Yankees skipper for a new tell-all tale about life with George? Chasing the Dream: My Lifelong Journey to the World Series: An Autobiography, written with Tom Verducci. Here’s an excerpt, courtesy of barnesandnoble.com. The ultimate manager also tried his hand a a business […]

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Fay Vincent and Leigh Montville discuss baseball on Charlie Rose

History

Guest host Frank Deford of Sports Illustrated and HBO talks to former MLB Commissioner Fay Vincent and author Leigh Montville about Babe Ruth and the history of baseball. Vincent also appeared on Rose in 2004 with SI writer Tom Verducci to discuss another Rose: Pete.

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This is Audible: Post-season edition

Audio

The podcast for This is Audible features baseball this week. In addition to a lengthy interview with Joshua Prager, author of The Echoing Green, and a reading by Roger Angell of his piece “Game Six” at a Symphony Space program, the podcast runs down the top ten baseball audio books. Not all the titles are […]

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This week (Oct. 22, 2007) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Playoffs are still the baseball topic in SI but they don’t rate the top story, which goes to Tom Brady and the New England Patriots (followed by a midseason college football piece). Tom Verducci penned “Something in the Air,” about the potential ALCS win by the Indians over the Red Sox (which may have actually […]

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The first time in Time

History

The March 30, 1925 issue of Time magazine featured the first occasion in which baseball was treated as a cover feature. The article regarded the rookie season of future Hall of Famer George Sisler. It’s always interesting to see how language — especially written — was treated in past generations. Before television, and even before […]

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Short (baseball) stories from Symphony Space, Part 2

Audio

The second production of short baseball fiction from Symphony Space, which originally aired Oct. 12, 2007 by Public Radio International, featured: Various authors, Baseball Haiku, read by Alec Baldwin and Isaiah Sheffer (from Baseball Haiku: The Best Haiku Ever Written About the Game, W.W. Norton). Frankly, I couldn’t always catch the 17 syllables that make […]

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Any baseball reference is better than no baseball reference at all

Reviews from other sources

From a review of Steve Almond’s (Not that You Asked) Rants, Exploits and Obsessions appearing on dailycampus.com, the University of Connecticut’s on-line edition There’s a chapter on baseball, which attempts to both invoke and criticize the  obese creature that is American sports fandom, but it’s limited to the predictable critiques of fanaticism and the idiotic-but-charming […]

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Comebacks help sell books

Newspapers

With the Red Sox on the verge of elimination from the ALCS, from Dan Shaughnessy of the Boston Globe, with emphasis added: If any team knows how to recover from an ALCS deficit, it’s the Red Sox. Boston wrote the book (which yielded approximately 26 books the following spring), beating the Yankees four straight times […]

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Short (baseball) stories from Symphony Space, Part 1

Audio

Thanks to the powers that be for producing two sessions of top notch baseball stories read at Manhattan’s Symphony Space. The stories in this section, which aired on Sept. 28, 2007 by Public Radio International, include: James T. Farrell, “My Grandmother Goes to Comiskey Park,” read by John Shea (from My Baseball Diary, Southern Illinois […]

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Commercial Parody: Post-Season annoyances

Commentary

Every year, networks and stations broadcasting the playoffs and World Series try to create a buzz for non-baseball fans, informing them, basically, that they’d be morons not to watch these games. I can’t say for certain that the spokesman are not hardcore fans, but regardless, they can be quite annoying in their exuberance. Herewith, a […]

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Baseball in

Magazines

“Two Cleveland die-hards, Scott Raab and Jay Levin, blog the baseball playoffs until a champion is crowned.” The running running is reminiscent of King and Onan in Faithful which consisted primarily of back-and-forth e-mails between the two writers on the 2004 Red Sox season. How fortunate for them that the Sox chose that year to […]

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Announcement: Mr. Lasorda goes to Washington

Annoucements

Baseball Hall of Famer Tommy Lasorda, who recently released his autobiography I Live for This, will be the guest speaker, with co-author Los Angeles Times sports columnist Bill Plaschke, at the Smithsonian, U.S. Department of Interior, 1849 C Street, NW (Main Entrance), Washington, DC on Wednesday, Nov. 14, at 7 p.m, Using video clips to […]

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Post-season (reading) picks

History

Some books about the teams in the League Championship Series to browse through while you’re waiting for those interminable changes. These are by no means the only or best titles, just general, all-purpose suggestions. As an aside, It’s interesting to note that the ALCS features two of the original teams, while the NLCS has two […]

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A Game of Brawl on Only a Game

Radio

OAG host Bill Littlefield interviewed Bill Felber, author of A Game of Brawl, which takes a look at the 1897 championship game between the Baltimore Orioles and Boston Beaneaters. Listen to the entire Oct. 13 show here. (Real Player required).

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Baseball in The New Yorker

History

Most on-line editions of print magazines have a search component. Some offer full-text versions of their articles, while others (the mean ones) only post abstracts, requiring the curious to either pay for a subscription (either full or “web-only”) or the individual item. I’ve done some preliminary research and will be posting the results from time […]

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Baseball: a primer through books

Older title

From the Cleveland Plain-Dealer, as the Indians prepare for the American League Championship Series against the Boston Red Sox, one writer’s opinion about the best books on the game. I always find it interesting how faux fans crawl out of the woodwork at this time of year, especially when FOX broadcasts the World Series, stocking […]

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