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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Bits and Pieces

Bits and Pieces

From Cultureshock, brief reviews on Tim Kurkjian’s Is This a Great Game or What? and Jim Bouton’s Ball Four. *** From the Sept. 12 issue of The Queens Gazette, this review of Shea Stadium, part of the Arcadia Publishing stable. AP produces books consisting mostly of photographs of extremely local interest and has dozens of […]

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Announcement: Zambrano book (and not a moment too soon)

Annoucements

Carlos Zambrano, the ace of the Chicago Cubs staff, has released his biography, published by Triumph Books. A piece in the Oct. 11 Chicago Sun-Times by Lacy J. Banks, reported that: Zambrano said his biography pretty much reflects the season he just finished. ”This season was full of ups and downs, and it ended too […]

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Way cool Beatles homage

History

From the Oct. 11 New York Times, George Vescey’s “Red Sox in the Sky With Diamonds.” The original The “new and improved” version See the “who’s who” here

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This Week (Oct. 15, 2007) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

As the days dwindle down to a precious for for Baseball 2007, SI headlines with the LCS. Michael Wilbon noted on Pardon the Interruption that it might be hard to get behind the NCLS since the Colorado Rockies and Arizona Diamondbacks teams have been around only a relatively short time. It’s not like the cubs, […]

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Be a clown (or two): Max Patkin and Al Schacht

Older title

Long before there was the San Diego Chicken and the Philly Phanatic, two Jewish ballplayers — more entertaining for their amusing antics than their prowess on the field — were crowned the “Clown Princes of Baseball.” Born in 1892, Al Schacht grew up in an Orthodox household. He pitched with middling success for the minor […]

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You gotta believe: Tug's commercial

Television

Frank Edwin “Tug” McGraw , 1944-2004

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This Week (Oct. 8, 2007) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

“Playoff Phever” cries the cover of this week’s issue, which pheatures a photo of shortstop Jimmy Rollins, who boldly predicted at the beginning of the season, when the pundits were handing the Mets the Eastern Division Crown, that his team would be in the thick of the race. Of course, thick turned to thin against […]

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* Mets post-mortum, continued: The Crying Game

Media analysis
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The Mets post-mortum

Magazines

The epic collapse of the New York Mets in the last two-plus weeks of the season will no doubt be deconstructed by writers in weeks and months to come. After all, Jeff Pearlman took an unflinching look at the underachieving team of 1992 in The Worst Team Money Could Buy and in many cases, 2007 […]

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Bits and Pieces

Bits and Pieces

SABRmetric guru Bill James contributed this piece to the Boston Globe on using statistics ti actually improve the game. *** The Writer’s Life blog features this interview with Steven M. Reilly, author of the sports memoir,  The Fat Lady Never Sings: How A High School Football Team Found Redemtpion on the Baseball Diamond. *** LA […]

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New York paper makes "Observer"-ation on Mays book project

Uncategorized

Is it a case of sour grapes? Are some publishers and writers, having been spurned by the “greatest living player” piling on the unpleasant comments? Read Leon Neyfahk’s piece — “New Willie Mays Biography Comes With Strings Attached” — in the New York Observer and judge for yourself. “In exchange for his cooperation, Mr. Mays […]

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