Lucid Culture review of Big Papi

Reviews from other sources

A fairly uncomplimentary review of David Ortiz’s book appears on the Lucid Cultre blog. It seems unfair to hold such books up to standards of other biographical titles. After all these are increasingly written by and about younger people whose accomplishments , for all the glitz and attention, are relatively unimportant on the grand scale […]

Read the full article →

Briefly…

Reviews from other sources

Two items on Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos and the Color Line, by Adrian Burgos Jr. ( University of California Press). The San Francisco Giants had several distinguihsed Latinos on the roster since they arrived in California in 1957, including Juan Maricahl, Orlando Cepeda, Jose Pagan, and the Alou Brothers, so it is fitting that the […]

Read the full article →

Take a blook at this…

Industry/Literary Analysis

According to Wikipedia: A blook can refer to either an object manufactured to imitate a bound book, an online book published via a blog, or a printed book that contains or is based on content from a blog. The term “blook” has been actively used since the 1990s, by librarian/ collector, Mindell Dubansky, to describe […]

Read the full article →

Shag Crawford, 1916-2007

Older title

Henry Charles “Shag” Crawford, an NL umpire from 1956-75, died on July 11. He was 90. Crawford, whose brother, Joey, was an NBA official, called more than 3,000 games, worked in three World Series three times, two NL championship series, and three All-Star games. He became an iconic figure in photographs of San Francisco Giants’ […]

Read the full article →

Briefly…

Bits and Pieces

Some quick thoughts from Ron Brown of the Bangor Daily News on Big Papi. *** Deadspin, among other blogs, offers a lengthy inter-office memo to ESPN employees.  It’s always interesting to get a “behind-the-scenes” peek at what goes on, especially in environments we think we would love to be privy to. For me, like many […]

Read the full article →

Now hear this: Audible.com's "All Star" podcast

Audio

This is Audible, an annoyingly double-entendred podcast, devoted its July 10 episode to several baseball audio books,including: The Big Bam, an unabridged version of Leigh Montville’s 2006 biography on Babe Ruth. After an excerpt from narrator Scott Brick, the podcast’s host, Josephine Reed, conducts a telephone interview with the author that sounds as if it […]

Read the full article →

Briefly

Bits and Pieces

Minor Leaguers spend quality time with young fans: Two members of the Harrisonburg (Va.) Turks took time out to read to their young followers. *** As Barry Bonds approaches the all-time home run Mark, there seems to be more press about Hank Aaron, as if to compare the two: one genial and genuine, the other […]

Read the full article →

Review: Baseball Forever

Older title

Ralph Kiner, a fixture in the Mets broadcast booth since their debut in 1962, was honored on July 14 with a “night.” A mix of baseball celebrities were on hand, including former Mets players (Bud Harrelson, Ed Kranepool, Rusty Staub, Jerry Koosman, Ed Charles, and Tom Seaver, who did a fairly shaky job in his […]

Read the full article →

Review: Birdie: Confessions of a Baseball Nomad

Older title

Birdie: Confessions of a Baseball Nomad by Birdie Tebbetts and James Morrison. (Triumph Books, 2002.) By his own description, George “Birdie” Tebbetts was a “Joe”–that is, he wasn’t the type of player who could hit 40 home runs or bat .300 or win any awards: “Joes are the guys who win you the pennant.” Tebbetts […]

Read the full article →

Audio interview: Curt Smith on MLB.com

Writers

Curt Smith, author of The Voice, was interviewed on MLB.com.

Read the full article →

Georgia's Favorite Yiddisher Son, et al

Magazines

From the July/August 2006 issue of American Jewish Life, an Atlanta-based publication, this profile of Ron Blomberg on the release of his memoir, Designated Hebrew. The May/June 2007 issue features several baseball stories, including: “Why Every American Jew Should Love the Boston Red Sox and Hate the New York Yankees: the Annotated Edition“, by Bradford […]

Read the full article →

Some All-Star Game Notes

Television

PRE-GAME FOX’s introduction — a bunch of players talking over each other about how special the All Star game is — made me think of James Earl Jones’ monologue in Field of Dreams; it even had that treacly FoD/The Natural music in the background. As much of a fan as I am, I found myself […]

Read the full article →

Briefly…

Bits and Pieces

Steve Buckley, a sports columnist for the Boston Herald, gives his picks for summer reading, mostly baseball with some older titles mixed in with more recent ones. His list includes Clemente: The Passion and Grace of Baseball’s Last Hero, by David Maraniss; Opening Day: The Story of Jackie Robinson’s First Season, by Jonathan Eig; Ted […]

Read the full article →

"Poets are like pitchers"

Writers

Poets are like baseball pitchers. Both have their moments. The intervals are the tough things. Robert Frost Frost’s favorite baseball team was the Boston Red Sox; his favorite player was Ted Williams. After attending an all-star game in Washington in 1956, Frost wrote a story for Sports Illustrated, “A Perfect Day – A Day of […]

Read the full article →

Review: 1941: The Greatest Year in Sports

Review by Ron Kaplan

1941: The Greatest Year in Sports by Mike Vacarro (Doubleday, 2006) While he does cover other sports in his newest offering, Mike Vaccaro, New York Post sportswriter and author of Emperors and Idiots, one of the endless stream of titles about the Red Sox-Yankees 2004 season, spends most of his prose on a quartet of […]

Read the full article →

Briefly

Bits and Pieces

** A review of The Cheater’s Guide to Baseball appears on The Pastime blog. ** The NY Times’ Richard Sandomir previewed the HBO special, Brooklyn Dodgers: The Ghosts of Flatbush, based loosely on Through a Blue Lens: The Brooklyn Dodgers Photographs of Barney Stein, 1937-57 (premieres July 11). The Dodgers played their last game in […]

Read the full article →

The All-Literary Team

Writers

The things you find when you’re cleaning up. Came across this piece I did for Fastball.com, a now-defunct esoteric baseball site. It’s one of several “theme” teams I created in my obviously too-copius spare time. I’m sure there are many other plasyers who fit the bill since I worked on this. Pitchers: Robbie “Samuel” Beckett […]

Read the full article →

Briefly…

Bits and Pieces

Opposing reviews for Jonathan Eig’s Opening Day. Pro and Con. And an interview with the author. *** This just in from Onion Sports: Aaron credited with 50 “lost” home runs. *** I usually don’t consider this type of book, but I was intrigued by the press release. There’s a new bio due out about Phillies’ […]

Read the full article →

Review: Casey at the Bat

Review by Ron Kaplan

“Casey at the Bat” has served as fodder for generations. Ernest L. Thayer’s poem (subtitled “A Ballad of the Republic”) has appeared in several incarnations as a juvenile picture book, portrayed by the likes of Leroy Neiman and C.F. Payne, among others. In one of the most visually and socially dazzling versions, Joe Morse depicts […]

Read the full article →

Review/Profile: Through a Blue Lens

Author profile/interview by Ron Kaplan

Dodger photographer highlighted game off the fields Barney Stein was an elfin man who loved his work, and it shows in the faces of his subjects, the Brooklyn Dodgers, for whom he served as official shutterbug for 20 years. In an effort to preserve his legacy, Stein’s daughter, Bonnie Crosby, collaborated with Dennis D’Agostino to […]

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); })();