Bronx is Burning: A revised assessment

Baseball movies

Prompted by this review of Jonathan Mahler’s best-seller, and after finally having finished watching the miniseries, I have come away with a new appreciation for the televised version. Several weeks ago, I was skeptical about the project. I amend my criticism somewhat. Platt was an excellent Steinbrenner and most of the series depicted the difficulties […]

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Review: Welcome to The Terrordome

Review by Ron Kaplan

The Pain, Politics, and Promise of Sports, by Dave Zirin (Haymarket Books, 2007) Dave Zirin is an angry young man. But he has his rights and speaks on behalf of the multitude of fans whose attatchment to their games goes beyond the box scores. His Web site, EdgeofSports.com, is a double entendre: the topics for […]

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Richard Carter, co-author of The Way It Is, dead at 89

Author Profile / interview

Richard Carter, an award-winning newspaper writer for the New York Compass, and co-author of Curt Flood’s 1971 memoir, The Way It Is, died on Sept. 8 at the age of 89. Flood wrote his book after his decision to quit baseball rather than acquiesce to a trade from the St. Louis Cardinals, where he had […]

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Author profiles: Angell, Halberstam, Deford

Author Profile / interview

From Powells.com, the online book store, three “exclusive” author interviews: “Roger Angell, Still Throwing Strikes“ “Frank Deford Recalls When the Radio Guys Came in with Packs on Their Backs, Looking like Astronauts (and More)“ “David Halberstam’s Hit Streak Continues“

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Profile: Elinor Naeun, editor of Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend

Profile by Ron Kaplan

When songwriter Julie Styne penned “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend,” he couldn’t have known that it would apply not only to jewelry, but to green fields and wood bats. Elinor Nauen recognized the dual meaning when she edited an anthology of baseball writing by women. The collection features a lineup of heavy literary hitters […]

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Bits and pieces

Bits and Pieces

From Baseball-fever.com, this discussion thread about books, television, and other arts-type issues. From the Dowagiac (Mich.) Daily News Web site, an somewhat poorly-written item about a new book on the House of David, which includes considerable material about its famous baseball team. From the Faithandfear, a blog about the NY Mets, this review of Dana […]

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Writer Profile: Sportswriter Maury Allen is Burning to act

Television

As a sportswriter for the New York Post, Maury Allen had a front row seat for the tumultuous 1977 baseball season. The Yankees were in turmoil; the city was mired in social and economic woes that came to national attention when disastrous blackout struck; and a serial killer was on the loose. Jonathan Mahler brought […]

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From father to son: Interview with James Bassler

Bits and Pieces

From the Smithsonian Archives of American Art, an extensive interview with the artists James Bassler, son of major leaguer catcher Johnny Bassler who played from 1913-14 with the Cleveland Naps and, after a seven year absence, returned for another seven years with the Detroit Tigers (1921-27). He compiled a lifetime .304 batting average with a […]

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On-line exhibit: "America's National Game": The Albert G. Spalding Collection of Early baseball Photographs

History

The New York Public Library is hosting this marvelous collection of old-tyme baseball images. Some are in uniform, others more formal, and others staged “action” shots. The Albert G. Spalding Collection includes photographs, prints, drawings, caricatures, and printed illustrations related to baseball and other sports gathered by the early baseball player and sporting-goods tycoon A. […]

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Announcement: Haunted Baseball

New title

From the Sept. 4, 2007 issue of the Worcester Telegram: Baseball and ghost stories are part of the fabric of American culture. A new book by Mickey Bradley and Dan Gordon, Haunted Baseball: Ghosts, Curses, Legends, Eerie Events (288 pp., The Lyons Press, $14.95), combines both, according to the publisher. It is a “fun and […]

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Pocket Books Gets Yankee Stadium retrospective

Industry/Literary Analysis

From Publishers Weekly, Sept. 4, 2007 With 2008 set to be the last year that the New York Yankees will play in the current Yankee Stadium, Pocket Books’ v-p and deputy publisher Anthony Ziccardi has acquired Yankee Stadium: The Official Retrospective. The book, acquired from Mark Vancil of Rare Air Media, will feature more than […]

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This week (Sept. 10) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

With football season starting, baseball will lose its dominance on the pages of SI. This week’s items include: Photos of Jay Buchholz’s no-hitter over the Orioles “Hitting fastballs with…Chipper Jones Back to School memories with several big leaguers including Shawn Green, Adam Dunn, and Russell Martin (no really big stars here) A chart of potential […]

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Best baseball books: One critic's opinion

Reviews from other sources

John Marshall, book critic for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, recently offered this list of his favorite baseball titles for 2007: Crazy ’08, by Cait Murphy The Psychology of Baseball, by Mike Stadler Senior Year, by Dan Shaughnessy Tales From the Seattle Mariners Dugout, by Kirby Arnold Baseball Haiku,edited by Cor van den Heuvel and Nanae Tamura […]

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The first Hispanic player?

Magazines

From Smithsonian.com, this piece by Ian Herbert which speculates on the identity of the first Hispanic player. “…why all the mystery surrounding someone who appears to have had little to no impact on the game of baseball? The answer lies in the most basic of details: Castro’s birthplace.” Until 2001, Castro was listed in the […]

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"Great Moments in Literary Baseball"

Magazines

From Atlantic Monthly, May 1987, an amusing collection of highlights by Robert Atwan featuring famous writers as players, including “Ernie” Hemingway, Jorge Luis Borges, Tommy Wolfe, “Lucky” Sam Beckett, Henry Miller, and Frank Kafka, among others. In the second game of a double-header in Detroit in 1919, the Boston first  base coach began pointing his […]

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This week (Sept. 3) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

The big theme this week is the NFL preview, but there are a handful of baseball items, including: A Q&A with Brewers’ rookie sensation Ryan Braun The SI MLB Poll: Who was your favorite player when you were a kid? Low scores here: 10 percent picked Nolan Ryan; 6 percent chose Junior Griffey, Call Ripken, […]

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This week (Aug. 27) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

An SI “player update” notes Bobby Cox as he broke John McGraw’s record for most ejections as a manager, getting the boot for the 132nd time in a win over the Giants on Aug. 14. Tom Verducci profiles the Red Sox’s David Ortiz resurgence and its implications for his team (“Blasts from the Past”). And […]

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Review: Just Joe: Baseball's Natural as told by his wife

Fiction

By Thomas K. Perry Pocal Press, 2007. From his humble Southern roots up to and including his banishment from organized baseball, Joseph Jefferson Jackson was considered one of the brightest stars in the sports firmament. Even the mighty Babe Ruth claimed to have modeled his style after the lithe lefty. The story of Shoeless Joe […]

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Gone fishin'

Uncategorized

Away for a little R&R. Gone north, to Alaska, where they’ve been playing The Midnight Sun Classic for more than 100 years. See you after Labor Day.

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Report: Do Umpires Discriminate?

Commentary

Charges of “ism” — racism, sexism, agism, etc. — always make for hot topics and the media loves to jump on any information, sometimes a bit too quickly, or without fully understanding the material/source/etc. Case in point: In the Aug. 13 edition of Time magazine, Katie Rooney asks the button-pushing question “Are Baseball Umpires Racist?” […]

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