* 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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Author profile: Zack Hample

Author profile/interview by Ron Kaplan

Matt Murphy, the lucky fan who corralled Barry Bonds’ record-breaking 756th home run on Aug. 7, should be grateful that Zack Hample wasn’t at the game. Hample, 30, is an expert in the art of procuring balls, whether snagging them himself with a specially-made glove in batting practice or simply asking for them. As of […]

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Book Reviews in Nine: A Journal of Baseball History & Culture

Books

NINE is a scholarly journal published twice a year by the University of Nebraska Press that “studies all historical aspects of baseball, centering on the societal and cultural implications of the game wherever in the world it is played. [The] journal features articles, essays, book reviews, biographies, oral history, and short fiction pieces.” Included in […]

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Mickey Rutner as muse

Fiction

World’s oldest Jewish ex-major leaguer tells all Just over 60 years ago — Sept. 13, 1947 — Mickey Rutner hit his only major league home run. He did it as a member of the Philadelphia Athletics in an 8-2 win over the Chicago White Sox. Rutner, who has made his retirement home in Georgetown, Tex., […]

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Author Profile: Dave Zinn

Author profile/interview by Ron Kaplan

Sports and politics: strange bedfellows As the son of Brooklyn Dodgers fans, sportswriter Dave Zirin developed an appreciation for the power a single act can have on not only sports, but the larger community as well. “I grew up in a house that revered Sandy Koufax, and I heard the story of him ducking out […]

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More on Mays' Manuscript

Upcoming projects

Jim Hirsch, who has been chosen to write the new biography of Willie Mays will reportedly receive $1.5 million for his efforts. “Willie has agreed to cooperate to give me access, but the conclusions are all my own,” the author told the NY Post. “My books don’t pull punches. If I were just to write […]

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Mets ownership turns Steinbrennerian?

Bits and Pieces

Is it just me, or does this message, sent yesterday by the Mets, have a familiar ring to it? (Actually, there will be no rings for the Mets this year…): Dear Mets Fan: All of us at the Mets are bitterly disappointed in failing to achieve our collective goal of building upon last year’s success. […]

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Halberstam Remembered

Author Profile / interview

From Publishers Weekly, Oct. 1, 2007: Halberstam Remembered At an event honoring David Halberstam at Warwick’s in La Jolla, Calif., the author’s cousin, Michael Halberstam, started the evening off with a tribute to the late reporter. The evening was capped off with a reading from Halberstam’s recent book, The Coldest Winter: America and the Korean […]

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Cleveland 'Lost'

Nostalgia

From the October issue of the always thought-provoking Lost Magazine, this essay on the lost innocence within a childhood memory, in this instance, the Cleveland Indians and the 1954 World Series. After watching the Mets go down in flames yesterday (go ahead, torch the stadium, too), and seeing all the distraught faces in the crowd […]

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Lists: Roger Kahn's favorites

Lists

From Memories of Summer: When Baseball Was an Art, and Writing About It a Game, the famed baseball writer offers his favorite dozen reads, including: Nice Guys Finish Last by Leo Durocher with Ed Linn (Simon and Schuster, 1975). (Co-winner) Bang the Drum Slowly by Mark Harris (Alfred A. Knopf, 1956).  The Glory of Their […]

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Announcement: New Gil Hodges biography

Annoucements

Mort Zachter, author of the surprise hit Dough, is working on a biography of former Dodger All-Star first baseman Gil Hodges. Hodges, who later managed the Washington Senators and the Miracle Mets of 1969, died in April 1973 of a heart attack during spring training. He was 48 years old. Zachter posted this essay on […]

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Lists: Milwaukee's Finest

Lists

From time to time, various writers, editors, publications, etc., will offer their list of “best” or “essential” baseball titles. So from time to time I’ll pass them on, FYI, with or without comment. First up, from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel,  two members of the Brewers front office and a local college professor weigh in on […]

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Bookshelf review: Baseball Books: A Collector’s Guide

Industry/Literary Analysis

by Mike Shannon (McFarland, 2007) As one who collects baseball books, I was happy to come across Mike Shannon’s latest offering. After reading it, however, I find myself depressed, contrary to the author’s philosophy. I — along with everyone else, according to the author — will never be a “completist,” that is one who acquires […]

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The Stark Truth: The Most Overrated & Underrated Players in History

Review by Ron Kaplan

By Jayson Stark Triumph Books “Let the debate begin,” challenges the cover of the book. Stark, senior baseball writer for ESPN, adds his opinions in the latest volume in the genre of books whose sole purpose seems to invite an argument. Going position by position, Stark picks his “mosts” along with four “runner-ups.” It’s not […]

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This week (Oct. 1, 2007) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

Finally, baseball is the cover story as the teams head into the final week of the season. Red Sox reliever Johnathan Papelbon is the cover boy and the lead in Tom Verducii’s “Late and Great.” “Summer’s over, but the heat’s being turned up on some of the game’s biggest stars as they take the October […]

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Because a small baby could fit on the "Bookshelf"…

Bits and Pieces

A staunch fan of the Chicago Cubs from Michigan City, Ind., has named the couple’s new son Wrigley. Last name Fields. Sounds like a Bart Simpson telephone gag.

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An inside look at baseball book publishing

Industry/Literary Analysis

According to an article by Andrew Grabois on BeneaththeCover.com, a web site that deals with the book industry, …[W]e find, not surprisingly, that baseball is still king. With its rich history, sacred pantheon of heroes and records, and endless statistics, baseball should remain the anchor of the category for the foreseeable future. Nevertheless, in the […]

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