Baseball Best-Sellers, April 11, 2025

2024 title

A reminder: 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 posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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The Bookshelf Conversations #193: Christian Sheppard

2025 title

I’ve always enjoyed books that look at the game from an “outside” point of view. That’s why I’m drawn to those titles that look at such diverse topics as baseball and philosophy or baseball and film. So it was kind of a natural when I discovered The Ancient Wisdom of Baseball: Lessons for Life and […]

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Bits and Pieces, April 8, 2025

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

Andrew Forbes is out with a new book: Field Work: On Baseball and Making a Living. If it’s anything like his last book, it will be quite thought-provoking. Another Bookshelf Conversation is in the offing. The New Yorker‘s “Sporting Scene” section takes up the issue of the Yankees’ new torpedo bats. Peter Drier offers this […]

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It’s a shanda

"Ripped from today's headlines..."

UPDATE: As of earlier this afternoon, the Pirates have decided restore Clemente’s sign. (Yiddish for “a shame.”) I try to keep politics out of the Bookshelf (I have another blog for that: The Worried Journalist), but with all this anti-DEI BS impacting baseball, I think it’s appropriate to address the situation. The Pittsburgh Pirates recently […]

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It’s an honor

Awards

I don’t check my mail often enough. If I did, I would have known that the Baseball Bookshelf made the list of  FeedSpot’s top 100 baseball sites (#46, to be precise). Muchas gracias.

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Lest We Forget: Jay North

Baseball out of context

The actor who played the title role in the Dennis the Menace TV show (1959-1963), passed away yesterday at the age of 73. Here’s his obituary from The New York Times. The baseball connection? An episode from the third season featuring none other than Sandy Koufax in “Dennis and the Dodger.” Despite his reputation as […]

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Lest We Forget: Joe DePugh

Lest We Forget

What might have been. From the New York Times obituary by Michael S. Rosenwald: Joe DePugh, the Little League teammate of Bruce Springsteen who inspired the rocker’s hit song “Glory Days,” a rousing, bittersweet anthem to their hardscrabble childhoods in Freehold, N.J., where time passed by “in the wink of a young girl’s eye,” died on […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, April 4, 2025

2024 title

A reminder: 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 posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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The things we keep: The Royals Cap

Uncategorized

When it comes to collecting baseball caps, I have specific rules. At the very least, I have to be in the state where the teams plays to be able to purchase one of them (or if someone is traveling and happens to think of picking one up for me); I can’t just go to a […]

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Bookshelf Review: The Last Manager

Uncategorized

appears on Bookreporter.com.    

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Baseball Best-Sellers, March 28, 2025

Uncategorized

A reminder: 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 posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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The Bookshelf Conversations #192: Harvey Araton

Uncategorized

As I say in the video, this is the second time I’ve chatted with Harvey Araton about Driving Mr. Yogi: Yogi Berra, Ron Guidry, and Baseball’s Greatest Gift. (The website is out of date but you’ll get a lot of info about him and his work nonetheless.) The previous Conversation was more than a decade […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, February 28, 2025

Uncategorized

A reminder: 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 posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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Bits and Pieces, February 26, 2025

Uncategorized

♦  Keith O’Brien (Charlie Hustle: The Rise and Fall of Pete Rose, and The Last Glory Days of Baseball ) wrote about the history-making “Robo-Ump” strike-zone technology for Rolling Stone. ♦  The New York Times published this book review on John Miller’s new biography, The Last Manager: How Earl Weaver Tricked, Tormented, and Reinvented Baseball, […]

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The Bookshelf Conversation #191: Scott Bolohan

Uncategorized

And here I thought I was so smart, that I was up on just about everything when it came to baseball off the field. Wrong. At this point, I don’t even know how I discovered The Twin Bill, which launched more than four years ago. Rather than me trying to explain, let’s get it straight […]

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Baseball Best-Sellers, February 21, 2025

Uncategorized

A reminder: 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 posting them). But close enough for government work, as the saying goes (see my piece on “Why Amazon’s search engine sucks“). In addition, occasionally […]

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Pass the Popcorn: The Cornerstone: Pete Alonso and Francisco Lindor

Uncategorized

There are very few who love the Mets more than I do, but even I found the hyperbole about the upcoming documentary this a bit much: In an unprecedented move that is sure to captivate baseball fans worldwide, Netflix has announced the release of a groundbreaking documentary series centered around two of the most beloved […]

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The Bookshelf Conversations #190: Danny Gallagher

Uncategorized

Next to the Mets, my favorite team is (was) the Montreal Expos. My maternal side comes from Montreal and I consider the time spent there on vacations and the five summers working at a sleep-away camp in the Laurentians among the happiest of my life. My Aunt Lily lived in Outremont, a neighborhood a long […]

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Soapbox time: Banned books

Uncategorized

Normally I do not write about books for kids, but after reading the story mentioned below, I’m POed enough to change my tune. How small the minds of many Americans seem to have become. Pen.org is a 100+-year-old organization which, according to the site, “stands at the intersection of literature and human rights to protect […]

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The Bookshelf Conversations #189: Jean Fruth

Uncategorized

It’s always a pleasure to speak with Jean Fruth. Whatever project she takes on is full of passion, whether it’s photographing baseball across small town America (Grassroots Baseball: Route 66) or talking with some of the greats of the game about how they got their start (Grassroots Baseball: Where Legends Begin), or, in her latest […]

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