Bookshelf (Mini) Review: Grassroots Baseball: Where Legends Begin

2019 Title

It may be a cliche, but baseball is the game that binds cities and countries around the world. Jean Fruth, one of today’s most prolific sports photographers, traveled to more than a dozen communities across the U.S and around the world to capture the joy, if not necessarily innocence, of youth. Each chapter begins with […]

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Remembering 9/11

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

On this somber day, baseball remembers with a number of articles and videos. Here is a sampling. All the items are from this year unless otherwise noted. The night baseball returned after 9/11: ‘These people needed this’ (New York Post) MLB announces plans to honor victims and families of 9/11 attacks on 18th anniversary (MLB.com) […]

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Oh, great. What am I supposed to do now?

Baseball clothing

One of the things I do collect are baseball caps. But the rule is that the purchase — either by I myself or a friend who’s getting it as a gift — has to be made in the city where the team is based. I rotate them often but after reading this, I wonder if […]

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Bits and pieces, Sept. 10, 2019

2019 Title

♦ Jim Bouton passed away a few months back, but the tributes keep coming, such as this one by Max Frankel on Offthebenchbaseball.com. And this from the Albany Herald‘s Barry Levine. ♦ Tony Award winners Billy Crudup, Tony Shalhoub, and Tony Award nominee Zachary Levi will take part in a live reading of author Don […]

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The things we keep: Missed opportunities

Baseball Cards

As baseball card collectors of a certain age know, Topps used to include various premiums in every pack of cards. I’m talking about the mid-60s to mid 70s, I’m guessing, although a Google search shows that the company has been revisiting past successes by offering some of these things again. One year it could be […]

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The Bookshelf Conversation: Seth Kramer

"Bookshelf Conversations"

Welcome back to a new “season” of Bookshelf Conversations. Now that the summer is over, I hope to be doing these on a regular basis. Leading off, we begin with Seth Kramer, “hyphenate” for the documentary, Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel, about the almost-Cinderella story that was the Israeli National Team in the 2017 […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, September 6, 2019

2018 Title

Note: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish writing one). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes. In addition, occasionally the powers-that-be over there try to pull a fast one […]

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A “Scandalous” anniversary

Anniversaries

Given the number of volumes that have been written following the Moneyball formula over the past few years, I’m almost shocked by the paucity of new material regarding the dark cloud that has hovered over our national pastime for 100 years. I’m referring to the 1919 Black Sox Scandal. To be sure, there have been […]

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A slightly less “Miracle” anniversary…

Team profile

This year represents the golden anniversary of the most successful Washington Senators in history, bearing in mind that this was the 1961 expansion model and not the previous incarnation  that relocated to Minnesota where they became the Twins that same year. Two years, later the “new” Senators themselves moved to Texas to change their uniform […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, August 30, 2019

2018 Title

Note: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish writing one). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes. In addition, occasionally the powers-that-be over there try to pull a fast one […]

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Bookshelf review: Homegrown

2019 Title

My review of the latest Moneyball-type book was published on BookReporter.com last Friday.

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Whose bright idea was THIS?

Nostalgia

What kills me about this “Players Weekend” business is the fact that MLB probably paid beaucoup bucks to some enterprising lads or lasses  to come up with these? And I’m not the only one who thinks so. Nope.   Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for the fun part, generated mostly by the players being […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, August 23, 2019

"Annuals"

Note: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish writing one). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes. In addition, occasionally the powers-that-be over there try to pull a fast one […]

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Trailing trailer

Baseball movies

Don’t know what I was thinking when I left The Stratton Story out of my entry on movie trailers. One of the better bio-pics. Plus it has one of my favorite actors, Jimmy Stewart, in the lead. Several items of note: The Stratton Story was directed by Sam Wood, the same man who gave us […]

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Lest we forget: Al Jackson

Lest We Forget

One of the best pitchers on an otherwise woeful NY Mets staff when they entered the league, Al Jackson passed away yesterday at the age of 83. Here’s the obit by Richard Goldstein in The New York Times. Probably overlooked is that the “little lefty” did two tours of duty for the Mets. The second time as a […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, August 9, 2019

2018 Title

Note: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish writing one). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes. In addition, occasionally the powers-that-be over there try to pull a fast one […]

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After the “Ball” is over…

Baseball best-seller

Just received a copy of Homegrown: How the Red Sox Built a Champion From the Ground Up, by Boston Globe journalist Alex Spier and it got me to thinking: How many of these microcosms of team-building have come down the pike since Michael Lewis first published Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game all […]

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Happy Trail(ers) to You

Baseball movies

Was tooling around the dial the other day (well, I guess TVs don’t actually have dials anymore) and came across one of my favorite “poppy seed” movies, A League of Their Own. (Amazingly, I can’t find the definition of a PSM online, but to my mind, it’s one of those films that you’ll watch whenever […]

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Lest we forget: Harvey Frommer

Lest We Forget

It’s with sadness that I report the passing of Harvey Frommer, the very definition of “a gentleman and a scholar,” who passed away August 1 at the age of 83. In a way, Harvey was responsible for the Bookshelf. It was almost 30 years ago when my first by-lined piece appeared in print: a book […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, August 2, 2019

"Annuals"

Note: The Amazon rankings are updated every hour, so these lists might not be 100 percent accurate by the time you read them (or even by the time I finish writing one). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes. In addition, occasionally the powers-that-be over there try to pull a fast one […]

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