Baseball for the Thinking Fan

Login | Register | Feedback

btf_logo
You are here > Home > Baseball Newsstand > Baseball Primer Newsblog > Discussion
Baseball Primer Newsblog
— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand

Thursday, February 04, 2010

Library Journal: Spring Baseball Roundup

Lots of interesting-looking baseball books reviewed in the link. Anybody read anything good lately?

Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Griffin (Vlad) Posted: February 04, 2010 at 07:47 PM | 36 comment(s) | Login to Bookmark
  Related News: GeneralReviews

Reader Comments and Retorts

Go to end of page

Statements posted here are those of our readers and do not represent the BaseballThinkFactory. Names are provided by the poster and are not verified. We ask that posters follow our submission policy. Please report any inappropriate comments.

Page 1 of 1 pages
   1. Dag Nabbit and his imaginary friends Posted: February 04, 2010 at 08:33 PM (#3454246)
I've heard lot of good things about Evaluating Baseball's Managers, 1876-2008.
   2. Forsch 10 From Navarone (Dayn) Posted: February 04, 2010 at 08:38 PM (#3454251)
The advance buzz about this one is just tremendous. Ahem.
   3. ess eff Posted: February 04, 2010 at 08:46 PM (#3454262)
Very much looking forward to Martha Ackmann (author of "The Mercury 13") on Toni Stone.
   4. Bobby Bonilla's Annuity (Matt) Posted: February 04, 2010 at 11:20 PM (#3454392)
Will the genius behind Old Hoss on Twitter finally be exposed? A love interest in 1884? Can't wait for that.
   5. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 04, 2010 at 11:50 PM (#3454399)
I'm working on Satchel right now.

Dayn, your author's bio leaves me wanting more.
   6. KingKaufman Posted: February 04, 2010 at 11:58 PM (#3454405)
I've read Dirk Hayhurst's book, "Bullpen Gospels," and I liked it a lot. I was asked to blurb it and I did. I have heard that some people will blurb anything because they like to see their name on a book cover, but I only do it, on the rare occasions I'm asked, if I have actually read and liked the book. As with Hayhurst's online writing, it's funny but also at times touching, with a good mix of high-larious bullpen/clubhouse/busride hi-jinx and his trademark "there isn't any magic in this uniform if you're a sick kid" theme. Also some funny-with-pathos stuff about his, shall we say, picturesque family.

I'm also reading a book that was mentioned here, "Top of the Order." Full disclosure: I'm one of the 25 writers who wrote about our favorite players. But even ignoring my chapter (it's the best one of course), it's a really fun book. Pat Jordan on his pal Tom Seaver ("You're just jealous because I threw harder than you," Jordan has been telling Seaver for 30 years), Roger Kahn on Jackie Robinson, Steve Almond on Rickey, Craig Finn (of the Hold Steady) on Kirby Puckett. There's a lot of fun stuff. It could have been a bunch of dewy, green green grass remembrances of childhood heroes crap, but at least in the 15 or so I've read so far, there's none of that.

In case you need to know: I have no stake in this book's sales. I got a flat fee. I get not a penny more if it sells a million.
   7. Forsch 10 From Navarone (Dayn) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 12:25 AM (#3454414)
Dayn, your author's bio leaves me wanting more.

There's just not much to me.
   8. Pasta-diving Jeter (jmac66) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 12:28 AM (#3454416)
Dayn, your author's bio leaves me wanting more.

but the picture looks exactly like ya
   9. Mike Webber Posted: February 05, 2010 at 01:17 AM (#3454429)
I'm reading the Jaffe book right now, and working on the Bill James Gold Mine. Chris' book is very good, I'm learning a lot about even the most recent managers.

John Sickels latest book came in the mail this week, Autographed Copy!

I just read Doyle Brunson's new biography. Very entertaining book, passed it to my dad and he read it pretty quickly too.

I'm going to try and re-read the first Percy Jackson book this week before I take the kids to the movies.
   10. Gamingboy Posted: February 05, 2010 at 02:35 AM (#3454450)
I recently finished Badass by Ben Thompson. Sadly, it did not include Bob Gibson, Ichiro or Albert Pujols.
   11. tl; dr (Voxter) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 02:46 AM (#3454451)
Anybody read anything good lately?


Yeah, Let the Great World Spin. But it's not about baseball, so . . . catch-22. Oh! A House for Mr Biswas. No baseball in that one, either. Nope, sorry, I got nothin'.
   12. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 03:22 AM (#3454459)
Outside of baseball, I have been reading a binch of James Burke.
   13. KingKaufman Posted: February 05, 2010 at 05:00 AM (#3454504)
Outside of baseball, I have been reading a binch of James Burke.


Outside of a dog, a book is a man's best friend ...
   14. Fred Lynn Nolan Ryan Sweeney Agonistes Posted: February 05, 2010 at 05:21 AM (#3454513)
Inside a dog, you're like, throw the ball! Throw the ball! Throw the ball!

I'm fishing around for a Next Big Project Book. Last year: Proust. This year: The Magic Mountain?
   15. Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Griffin (Vlad) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 12:25 PM (#3454575)
I'm fishing around for a Next Big Project Book.

I really can't recommend Infinite Jest strongly enough.
   16. Quiet Flows the Don Taussig Avenger (Edmundo) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 01:54 PM (#3454601)
I'm reading Once More Around the Park by Roger Angell. This might say something about me :) but it is almost too literate for a baseball book. I am feeling that the sparkling prose is getting in the way of the stories.
I just finished another book of stories, albeit on a different topic. Peter Guralnick's Lost Highway was a wonderful book of stories from the mid to late 70s about the lives of musicians. Guralnick gathered his stories from both interviews and hanging on tour. The four sections are about old country guys, hillbilly/rockabilly, then modern country outlaws and blues artists. The author had a way of getting inside most of his subjects.
   17. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 02:06 PM (#3454603)
Says here that Angell was a protoblogger.
   18. RMc's grumbling has gone far enough Posted: February 05, 2010 at 02:22 PM (#3454616)
I'm just beginning the final volume ("The Third Reich At War") of Richard J. Wilson's trilogy on Nazi Germany. Great writing, but, man, is it ever depressing. Unspeakable savagery. I don't think I could finish it if I didn't already know the Nazis would lose at the end.

Then again, having Zooey Deschanel staring at me from that Netflix ad makes everything all better.
   19. gef the talking mongoose Posted: February 05, 2010 at 02:29 PM (#3454619)
Baseball? Nothing lately. Otherwise, at the moment I'm reading nonfiction volumes on, let's see, avian flu, an 1860 murder case in the UK & the Morro Castle fire.
   20. Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Griffin (Vlad) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 02:44 PM (#3454628)
I don't think I could finish it if I didn't already know the Nazis would lose at the end.


Just because they did in the movie is no guarantee that it'll happen the same way in real life.
   21. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: February 05, 2010 at 03:11 PM (#3454646)
Repoz's wet dream book---sure to be at least 20 pinata posts in here, since the standards for selection probably don't include WARP and EqA numbers:

Top of the Order: 25 Writers Pick Their Favorite Baseball Players of All-Time. Da Capo. Apr. 2010. c.288p. ed. by Sean Manning. ISBN 978-0-306-81855-4. pap. $15.95.
   22. Forsch 10 From Navarone (Dayn) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 03:35 PM (#3454663)
I read "Bobby Fischer Goes to War" not long ago. I don't know a thing about chess, but it was a pretty fascinating look at the '72 match with Spassky and all the related subplots. Recommended.
   23. Dewey, Steven Wright Wannabe and Soupuss Posted: February 05, 2010 at 03:44 PM (#3454669)
Repoz's wet dream book---sure to be at least 20 pinata posts in here, since the standards for selection probably don't include WARP and EqA numbers:

Top of the Order: 25 Writers Pick Their Favorite Baseball Players of All-Time.


I don't know that I would use WARP or EqA to pick my favorite players, either, and if someone did, I'd think they were pretty strange.
   24. Hack Wilson Posted: February 05, 2010 at 03:45 PM (#3454670)
Slightly off topic but I have read a number of great books about polar explorer Ernest Shackleton and today the BBC is reporting that five crates of his Scotch whisky and brandy have been found in the ice in Antarctica. From the BBC, "Given the original recipe no longer exists this may open a door into history."
   25. Home Run Teal & Black Black Black Gone! Posted: February 05, 2010 at 04:20 PM (#3454712)
Every one of these books gets a highly recommended review. Where are the crappy baseball books?
   26. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 04:20 PM (#3454713)
C'mon, Andy. The blurb says favorite and not best. There is a difference. That said, that book sounds like it is write up my alley. I've beeen musing about stuff like that lately, trying to come up with a team of unique players like Mark Fidrych, Manny, etc cetera.
   27. Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Griffin (Vlad) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 04:30 PM (#3454719)
I've beeen musing about stuff like that lately, trying to come up with a team of unique players like Mark Fidrych, Manny, etc cetera.


Arlie Latham.
   28. PreservedFish Posted: February 05, 2010 at 04:33 PM (#3454722)
Slightly off topic but I have read a number of great books about polar explorer Ernest Shackleton and today the BBC is reporting that five crates of his Scotch whisky and brandy have been found in the ice in Antarctica.


This is the type of ridiculous thing I would try and buy if I were a billionaire.
   29. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 05:23 PM (#3454769)
Arlie Latham.


I'm sort of a 19th Century baseball guy, but those guys like him and King Kelly are on their own planet.
   30. Jolly Old St. Neck Wound, Moral Idiot Posted: February 05, 2010 at 05:53 PM (#3454794)
Repoz's wet dream book---sure to be at least 20 pinata posts in here, since the standards for selection probably don't include WARP and EqA numbers:

C'mon, Andy. The blurb says favorite and not best. There is a difference.


You're probably right, but I guess my mind has been numbed into cynicism by too many threads where Player X or Writer Y expresses a subjective opinion about some player or some trend in baseball, only to be met with a firestorm of statistical objections that have nothing to do with the point that was being made. It's a Take No Prisoners mentality that won't recognize any sort of value that can't be quantified, and won't let go of the subject until the point of unconditional surrender. Perhaps they'll lay off this book, but I wouldn't bet too much on it.

That said, that book sounds like it is write up my alley. I've beeen musing about stuff like that lately, trying to come up with a team of unique players like Mark Fidrych, Manny, etc cetera.

Yeah, I'm looking forward to it as well, although like most of these books, it'll wind up on Amazon at about $3.98 before the year is up. And as usual, I'll have totally conflicted feelings about this.

Now here's the book that really caught my attention. Hopefully it'll use John Holway's research as a starting point for the backstories:

Gay, Timothy M. Satch, Dizzy, and Rapid Robert: The Wild Saga of Interracial Baseball Before Jackie Robinson. S. & S. Mar. 2010. c.384p. photogs. ISBN 978-1-4165-4798-3. $26.

Jackie Robinson integrated the major leagues in 1947, but off-season "barnstorming" games by pro players were integrated before World War II. The larger-than-life Satchel Paige and Dizzy Dean played, one black, one white, both possessed of unequaled skill, panache, and an innate sense of marketing. Imagine a country fighting economic upheaval and starved for heroes and entertainment. Add the precocious Bob Feller, whose fastball was measured at better than 104 miles per hour, and you have a new classic baseball book. Gay (Tris Speaker) shows these men bringing integrated competition to baseball fans far from big league stadiums, from Cuba to the Pacific coast. With events that defy the imagination. Highly recommended.


The only problem I can see with it is that well over 90% of the participants in those games are likely to be dead by now. I'd hate to see all the stories come from just Bob Feller.
   31. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 06:10 PM (#3454802)
Yeah, I'm looking forward to it as well, although like most of these books, it'll wind up on Amazon at about $3.98 before the year is up. And as usual, I'll have totally conflicted feelings about this.


I'm just hoping it winds up at a local library.
   32. Jarrod HypnerotomachiaPoliphili(Teddy F. Ballgame) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 06:14 PM (#3454806)
Some great stuff on that list. I want to read the story of the epic playoff clash between the Yankees and Mariners in 1995, for instance. Thank god some able historian was able to dig deep into forgotten archives to resuscitate this piece of the distant past. But what's up with this:

Cameron, Mike. Public Bonehead, Private Hero: The Real Legacy of Baseball’s Fred Merkle. Sporting Chance Press. Mar. 2010. c.184p. photogs. bibliog. index. ISBN 978-0-9819-3421-1. $20. pap.

Chicago sportswriter Cameron [I was really hoping this was by the center fielder] presents a flavorful and entirely enjoyable history, not only of the unfortunate Fred Merkle, but of the deadball era, which was livelier than any ever known. ["Livelier"--I see what you did there] But it’s poor Merkle whom history remembers, because his failure to touch second base when his Giants got a walk-off homer meant he’d been technically forced out there (Rule 59), The Cubs haven’t won a series since that year, the “Merkle Curse.” Highly recommended for baseball fans young and old.—Margaret Heilbrun (MH), Library Journal


Walk-off homer? I hope that's the reviewers glitch and not the author's.
   33. winnipegwhip Posted: February 05, 2010 at 09:51 PM (#3455008)
C'mon, Andy. The blurb says favorite and not best. There is a difference. That said, that book sounds like it is write up my alley. I've beeen musing about stuff like that lately, trying to come up with a team of unique players like Mark Fidrych, Manny, etc cetera.


One of my favorite baseball books is Danny Peary's CULT BASEBALL PLAYERS. Each chapter is written by various people (baseball writers, fiction writers, ballplayers, actors, etc.) who write about their favorite players. I can't imagine the 25 baseball writers talking about their faves will touch this book.

Who could top:

John Sayles on Dick Stuart
Ron Shelton on Steve Dalkowski
Tony Kubek on Mickey Mantle
Joe Magtegna on Ernie Banks
Jim Kaat on Dick Allen
Lawrence Ritter on Chief Myers

There is also chapters on Mark Fidrych, Luis Tiant, Bill Lee, Vic Power, George Kell, Moe Berg, Joe Charboneau, Dusty Rhodes, Ted Kluzewski. I am sure there is over 50 chapters.
   34. Designated Sitter (GGC) Posted: February 05, 2010 at 09:57 PM (#3455019)
My local library supposedly has that book and I could find it. I settled for Odddballs which was fun, but ultimately not that satisfying.
   35. Der Komminsk-sar Posted: February 05, 2010 at 10:21 PM (#3455041)
Cult Baseball Players is a good one. I was once buying it from a used book merchant and someone swiped it out of my stack pre-register.
   36. Fred Lynn Nolan Ryan Sweeney Agonistes Posted: February 05, 2010 at 11:09 PM (#3455069)
Third the recommendation for "Cult Baseball Players."

And if anybody's interested, Shackleton's own account, "My South Polar Expedition," is available for download at the UC Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project:
http://cylinders.library.ucsb.edu/

It's less than four minutes, but still: it's Shackleton talking! They also have William Jennings Bryan, Sophie Tucker, and Edward M. Favor (with one of the early baseball tunes, "The Umpire Is a Most Unhappy Man"), among many others.
Page 1 of 1 pages

You must be Registered and Logged In to post comments.

 

 

<< Back to main

Support BBTF

donate

Thanks to
Bob Dernier Cri
for his generous support.

Bookmarks

You must be logged in to view your Bookmarks.

Hot Topics

NewsblogOT: NBA Monthly Thread, February 2012
(419 - 8:34pm, Feb 10)
Last: ray james

NewsblogSullivan: 2011 in Extreme Home Runs
(2 - 8:33pm, Feb 10)
Last: ellsbury my heart at wounded knee

NewsblogPrimer Dugout (and link of the day) 2-10-2012
(17 - 8:31pm, Feb 10)
Last: Bob Evans

NewsblogCurt Schilling Says Manny 'Quit on the Field,' Teammates Stopped Him From Confronting Slugger
(29 - 8:31pm, Feb 10)
Last: Arnett Mead (Arjun)

NewsblogStark: Big names who might be on the move
(3 - 8:28pm, Feb 10)
Last: birdlives is one crazy ninja

NewsblogSources: Cubs’ Starlin Castro Accused Of Sexual Assault
(6130 - 8:24pm, Feb 10)
Last: Misirlou's got a busy day, he's wearing a vest

NewsblogMets owners knew about Maddoff
(32 - 8:16pm, Feb 10)
Last: SouthSideRyan

NewsblogKnobler: Stay away from steroids -- but vote how you want
(26 - 8:14pm, Feb 10)
Last: Booey

Transaction Oracle2012 ZiPS Projections - Oakland A's
(56 - 8:12pm, Feb 10)
Last: Drew (Primakov, Gungho Iguanas)

NewsblogMLB: Hall of Fame worthy? Furthest thing from Schilling's mind
(41 - 7:55pm, Feb 10)
Last: PreservedFish

NewsblogGrantland/Bill James: An Open Letter to the Hall of Fame About Dwight Evans
(45 - 6:59pm, Feb 10)
Last: Ron J

NewsblogESPN: Law: Top 100 Prospects (paywalled)
(11 - 6:54pm, Feb 10)
Last: Crispix Attacks

Newsblog'Duk: Tim Lincecum slims down with swim routine, loses appetite for McDonald’s
(298 - 6:51pm, Feb 10)
Last: rfloh

NewsblogFSKC announces on-air lineup for Royals - Rex Hudler and Steve Physioc to join
(12 - 6:32pm, Feb 10)
Last: Robert in Manhattan Beach

Sox TherapyOffseason Minor League Thread
(3 - 6:11pm, Feb 10)
Last: Dan

Buy MLB playoff tickets, plus 2011 World Series, 2011 ALCS tickets and NLCS game tickets. We also have Texas Rangers playoff schedule, tickets to Red Sox games and Yankees game tickets. Plus, buy Phillies baseball tickets, Tigers playoff tickets and the biggies like ALDS baseball tickets and 2011 NLDS tickets.

Demarini, Easton and TPX Baseball Bats

 

 

 

AllianceTickets.com has cheap MLB Tickets. Get all your Colorado Rockies Tickets, Seattle Mariners Tickets, San Francisco Giants Tickets and all your favorite baseball tickets here. We also carry cheap Denver Broncos Tickets, Seattle Seahawks Tickets and Denver Nuggets Tickets.

Page rendered in 0.6584 seconds
40 querie(s) executed