Review: The Triumph and Tragedy of Tony C

Older title

August 18 marked the 40th anniversary of the near-fatal beaning of Boston Red Sox star Tony Congiliaro. Author David Cataneo portrays Tony C. as a hometown product. Handsome, talented, and tremendously popular the slugger amassed 100 home runs at a very young age and was touted by some as the next big thing. But a […]

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Review: Perfect, Once Removed

Reviews from other sources

From Oneminutebookreview, this piece on Phillip Hoose’s memoir of growing up in the 1950s and discovering a connection with an improbable Yankees hero. Perfect, Once Removed is the rare baseball book that has something for fans at all levels. In this lively memoir Phillip Hoose tells how his cousin once removed, Don Larsen, pitched a […]

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Artist profile: Graig Kreindler

Artist profile

Fortunately for Graig Kreindler, his grandmother did not follow the cliche of tossing out his dad’s baseball card collection. If she had, he might never have developed a love for the game that turned into a career as a highly sought-after sports artist. While other kids were mad over Mantle or cooing over Koufax , […]

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A diversion

Bits and Pieces

   

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An extensive list of baseball book reviews from SABR

Bits and Pieces

This list includes more than 125 reviews. Some are the books are duplicated by different reviewers.

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This week (Aug. 20) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

This week SI features its College Football Preview, so there’s little in the way of baseball items, relatively speaking. The main story: With the Bonds watch over, baseball shifted its spotlight to a group of first-year stars — one a teenager — helping to shape tight playoff battles. Other baseball items: The Reinvention of Rick […]

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Phil Rizzuto, 1917-2007

Magazines

This is a sad day for Carmen and me. Phil was a gem, one of the greatest people I ever knew – a dear friend and great teammate. He was a heck of a player, too. When I first came up to the Yankees, he was like a big, actually small, brother to me. He’s […]

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SABR Bibliography Committee Newsletter

Books

The August edition includes: Reviews on Baseball Confidential: Secret History of the War Among Chandler, Durocher, MacPhail, and Rickey; The Lords of Baseball; and 1947: When All Hell Broke Loose in Baseball Branch Rickey: Baseball’s Ferocious Gentleman A History of Cuban Baseball, 1864-2006 An annotated bibliography on Yankees books “What One Book” Survey (Note: Requires […]

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(Many) Bits and Pieces

Bits and Pieces

Catching up… From the Manchester Union Leader, a sports column with reviews of New England-centric media, including Senior Year: A Father, A Son, and High School Baseball, by Dan Shaughnessy; High & Outside, a documentary on Bill “Spaceman” Lee; and Yastrzemski, by Carl Yastrzemski. From The London Independent (the unlikely source), this report on the […]

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Baseball poetry: 2B or Not 2B

Older title

With the passing of Phil “The Scooter” Rizzuto today, I thought it appropriate to “reprint” a precious entry on his “poetry-inspired” book, O Holy Cow. —– A program on the Feb. 10, 2007 broadcast of NPR’s Only a Game had an interesting topic, Shakepeare as Sport. It reminded me of a review I did on […]

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The Savvy Girls of Summer

Industry/Literary Analysis

The Savvy Girls of Summer: Every Woman’s Guide to Understanding and Enjoying Baseball, by Deidre Silva and Jackie Koney, is due out in October by Skyhorse Publishing. According to the Web site, the book: will educate fans with a passionate interest in the game by offering information and an historical perspective that will add to […]

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Bonds and the Media Industry

Industry/Literary Analysis

Not that he’s been out of the media eye lately, but Barry Bonds’ recent achievement has given new life not only to books about him, but to the writing profession as a whole. You have the philosophical/scientific communities arguing about the ethical issues and whether or not performance enhancing drugs can actually help a batter […]

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Barry Bonds and Philosophy

Industry/Literary Analysis

I’ve long been interested in philosophy. Or rather the concept of philosophy, with all its thoughtfulness and intellectual pursuits. So I wondered what that community had to say about Bonds’ potentially questionable methods en route to 756. Herewith a sample: From Uselesstree: The un-Way of Barry Bonds When we try too hard to reach a […]

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Financial Report: Covering Bonds

Commentary

I was listening to the Mets game today and came in the middle of a comment from one of their announcers. All I got was the suspicion by someone that Hank Aaron might have received payment for his congratulatory message to Barry Bonds following the record breaking home run. Now, coming in the middle of […]

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This week (Aug. 13) in Sports Illustrated

Magazines

By necessity, the Aug. 13 issue of SI did not include Barry Bonds’ momentous occasion. Working for a weekly pubication myself, I appreciate the problems of trying to include the latest news when you have to go press, even while that news is happening. However SI does feature, as its cover story, Bonds’ 755th home […]

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TV Classic: Deconstructing "Baseball Bugs"

Classic title

I received an advance copy of The Best American Sports Writing, 2007 yesterday. One of the first items I noticed, since I was scanning specifically for baseball, was Derek Zumsteg’s “Bugs Bunny, Greatest Banned Player Ever,” a deconstruction of the 1946 Looney Tunes classic, “Baseball Bugs,” in which the title character takes on a goonish bunch […]

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The things we keep

Bits and Pieces

I was cleaning up my basement and found this old game. Never realized it had the Roger Maris seal of approval. See it in action. Of course, the game never worked like it does in the commercial (big surprise). The spring would break, the balls would fly over the edges, and I can never remember […]

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Commentary from Editor & Publisher: Barry Bonds and "Armor-all"

Bits and Pieces

The medias keeps coming up with new ways to dismiss Barry Bonds’ accomplishments. First it was performance enhancing drugs. Now it’s the elbow protection he wears to the plate. In an commentary from the Aug. 6 edition of EditorandPublisher.com, illustrator Michael Witte claims the device “may have contributed to no fewer than 75 to 100 […]

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Shooting the shooters?

Industry/Literary Analysis

NFL Tells Photog Group: Vests With Ads Will Stay (Because photographs can go on a bookshelf, and because what happens in on sport can spread to the rest of the sports community…) An Aug. 6 story on Editor and Publisher brings a disturbing story about forcing the NFL mandating that news photographers must wear logo-encrusted […]

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Source: Sci-Fi baseball

Internet

As a stand-alone from the previous entry about baseball fiction, I found an extensive list of science fiction/baseball stories, as compiled by Steven Silver. Many of these have appeared in various SF pulp anthologies, rather than as full out novels. I don’t know if I’d agree with each entry; for example, I wonder if some […]

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