Baseball Books
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An incredible bookReview Date: 2004-02-25
Something to Write Home About in Letters to a FanReview Date: 2005-09-30
Question: What do you get when you mixReview Date: 2003-04-05
Something to TreasureReview Date: 2003-07-18
If you find it, buy it.Review Date: 2003-05-07

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Flawed But EntertainingReview Date: 2005-07-03
Thankfully, the book is not marred too noticeably by the usual TSN writing style; namely terse, fumbling little capsules that adhere strictly to certain familiar narrative arcs. The same cannot be said for the opinions therein, which are often almost painfully wrong-minded or dependent on faulty logic. It becomes clear that this volume was meant more as a stately coffee table book than a Bill James-style journey into the jungle of stats and lore to determine the pecking order of the great game.
I am a maniacal fan, to put it kindly, and one that must analyze history for its own sake. This book is intended for a fan of a slightly lesser level of obsession, which is not to say that it cannot be recommended heartily for most.
Baseball's 100 Greatest PlayersReview Date: 2002-10-29
The Sporting News Selects Baseball's Greatest PlayersReview Date: 2002-01-03
Scores a Home Run With These Pics!Review Date: 2000-11-22
I like that the choices in this book are unaffected by race, scandal or personality. Josh Gibson, Satchel Paige, Buck Leonard, Cool Papa Bell, and Oscar Charleston of the Negro League made this list. It's truly sad that so many talented ballplayers were kept out of the majors because of their race. Joe Jackson, is another "Top 100 member" who of course was banned after the Black Sox scandal. Others like Ty Cobb, who was a notorious hothead in his day are also here.
Reading through the book brought many smiles to my face as I recalled watching so many players, like Harmon Killebrew, Kirby Puckett, Willie McCovey (my all-time favorite), Ernie Banks, and Hank Aaaron just to name a few.
So many excellent choices, this book is well-done and a great momento to all the athletes who have made baseball the game it is today.
A baseball collector's keepsake!Review Date: 2000-01-20
Starting with Babe Ruth, as most baseball ranking do, right to number 100 Early Wynn, there are stories, photos and quotes that make this book one the best. I was impressed by the vast collection of pictures throughout the book.
The book has a top 100 timeline of players, the All Time top 10 selections lists, all decade teams, top100 breakdowns and a top 100 quiz included in the book as well. For every baseball fan and purest, this would make the prefect gift or collectors item.
A great addition to my library, a book that I will share with my children for years to come, Baseball's 100 Greatest Players needs only to add a video to make the set complete!

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Kinsella is a master of short fictionReview Date: 2008-02-23
Kinsella also has written a number of short stories, relying on baseball as the theme, but with themes that are universal. This isn't the "get the big hit to win the game" story, but rather baseball as a metaphor.
With any collection, the question of best and worst short stories come up. Particulary strong is the opener "The Last Pennant Before Armageddon" which deals with a prophecy that the next pennant that the Cubs win will be the last pennant that any team ever wins -- a prediction that still hasn't been tested since this piece was penned in 1984.
The collection also closes strong with "The Thrill of the Grass" dealing with the baseball strike and a populist secret revolt against artificial turf -- a methphorical return to purity.
Excellent work. Kinsella is truly a master writer.
Baseball DreamsReview Date: 2008-07-17
"The Last Pennant Before Armageddon" is the highlight of the set as other reviewers have noted. As one might guess based on the title, the plot involves the Cubs winning the pennant. Though some countries, playoff alignments, and even teams from the story no longer exist, the end of the world would seem to be the logical conclusion to a Cubs pennant victory. The swerve at the end of the story may or may not surprise some readers.
Other highlights in the set include "The Night Manny Mota Tied the Record", "The Battery", and "The Thrill of the Grass". In a plot that preceded anything written by Mitch Albom, "The Night Manny Mota Tied the Record" explores the feelings after the death of Yankee catcher Thurmon Munson. Would a hardcore (non-Yankee) baseball fan give his life to save Munson's? "The Battery" takes readers to Santo Domingo where a wizard created in the vein of author Terry Pratchett sees the birth of baseball playing twins. While at least one twin excells in baseball, the wizard is the star of this story. "The Thrill of the Grass" is set during the 1981 players' strike, though the same scenario woud apply to 1994. The narrator breaks into an empty stadium as the story begins. Though he dislikes the lack of activity, he is most appalled by the artificial turf.
Though not all of the stories were gems, baseball fans are certain to enjoy this collection just as much as Kinsella's other works.
Kinsella's best collection of short storiesReview Date: 2004-06-17
Most of the stories are not so much about baseball, it's more a case of using baseball as a background and common thread to tie the stories all together.
These are the kind of stories you can read over and over again. One of my favorites was the story about the fans who decided to turn the latest player's strike into a chance to replace astroturf with real grass. With the stadium shut down for the strike, they came in and returned the field to a natural state. I've always thought that when the players strike they should strike to get rid of astroturf; a cause many fans could get behind.
I don't know of any baseball fan who would not enjoy these stories.
Some gems (diamonds, actually)Review Date: 2003-11-06
Classic baseball fiction, especially for Cub fansReview Date: 2003-10-17
My alltime favorite among this collection is "The Last Pennant Before Armageddon." In the wake of the Cubs' collapse this fall, a work like this has real prescience and is somehow reassuring that there was a higher purpose behind it all.
Still, there are other strong stories in the mix. In one, the narrator is offered the chance to trade places with the recently-killed Yankees catcher Thurman Munson. Another, more whimsical story takes you inside the clubhouse of the 1951 Giants, as a surprisingly literate team debates whether The Greaty Gatsby is an allegory.
For me, "The Last Pennant Before Armageddon" is reason enough to buy this book. In the wake of the 2003 NLCS, I feel a dire need to read it . . . repeatedly.

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SHIBE PARK LIVES AGAINReview Date: 2004-04-13
Outstanding BookReview Date: 2007-07-18
If your a native Philadelphian, Phillies, or a baseball fan you must read this book. It talks about not only the A's, but the Phillies, and even the Eagles and their ownerss. It talks extensively about the immediate neighborhood, North Philly, and the problems that both Connie Mack & the Carpenters faced owning the stadium. I didn't think the book would be as near as enjoyable as it proved to be. The Amazon reader's star ratings are usually grossly over graded, but not in this instance.
Slammin'Review Date: 2004-08-13
WELL WORTH READINGReview Date: 2001-12-15
A Fine Discussion of the Role of MLB in Philadelphia Review Date: 2006-02-11
This is sophisticated history, not the once-over-lightly narratives of many baseball histories. Kuklick emphasizes the interrelations of the A's, the Phillies, and the residents of Philadelphia with Shibe Park as the point of convergence. Connie Mack, the owner of the A's, provides the human face of much of the description in the book and his successes and numerous failings on and off the field give "To Every Thing a Seasons" much of its dramatic power. Mack built two great baseball powerhouses with the A's, the first time in the years surrounding 1910 and again in the years around 1930. In both cases he dismantled those teams and sold the players to other Major League Baseball (MLB) franchises. The Phillies had far fewer good years than the A's, but did manage to win a National League pennant in 1950, and came close in 1964 when a late season collapse allowed the St. Louis Cardinals to take the pennant.
Kuklick does not recite too much of the on-field activities of the Phillies and A's, but instead focuses on the role of Shibe Park, and by extension its occupants, in the life of the Philadelphia. As such "To Every Thing a Season" is quite excellent urban history, and at some level also business and economic and social history, rather than sports or baseball history. Kuklick is correct to conclude, and this very fine book emphasizes it: "Part of the story of Shibe Park is one of proprietorial rapacity, cynicism, and the limitations of even admirable people in an industrial society" (p. 190). Kuklick's epilogue is a superb contemplation of the social function of MLB teams and their home cities, using Philadelphia as a model. It helped generate a shared identity and taught camaraderie and patience and acceptance of the world and its fortunes. In the end, Shibe Park served as a collector of memories for the city, of both good and bad events. It became, over time, the city's equivalent of the family kitchen table.
There is no question but that any reader will learn quite a lot from this book, and I recommend it as the starting point for serious investigation of MLB and its relation to the homes of its various franchises.

A Great Book From A Great Author!Review Date: 2008-02-19
another winnerReview Date: 2008-03-24
Man oh manReview Date: 2007-07-13
Rookie of the YearReview Date: 2007-01-15
Teacher's Grade: A-Review Date: 2007-05-17
A good story to read aloud, and a perfect one for sports-minded 4-7th graders to relish.

Deftly researched and highly readableReview Date: 2006-10-04
TY COBB BY CHARLES C. ALEXANDER (1984)Review Date: 2004-02-23
Audio book review
Charles C. Alexander's Ty Cobb is an illuminating review of
the legendary early Twentieth Century baseball superstar. This audio book, read by Walter Zimmerman, is written more like
historical biography than a baseball book
Alexander dispels many long-held Cobb myths. Cobb was mean and nasty, but not
nearly the ogre of legend. In fact, Cobb was a devout Christian (Baptist), very well spoken, a man who cared about his public
image, and engaged himself in many acts of on and off-field kindness. Caricatured as a savage racist by revisionist history,
Cobb actually was kindly in his relations with the many black people he grew up with in Georgia, some of whom worked for his
family. He had no patience for blacks he considered uppity. He was not Branch Rickey, but he was not the Grand Dragon of
the K.K.K., either. Miserly? Sometimes, but without fanfare he took care of players who had hit the skids. A spikes-sharpened
demon? You bet, but Ty also shook hands with his combatants after the dust settled, and performed various acts of dovish
peacemaking for the benefit of hostile fans.
Alexander is not a psychiatrist, but it is obvious that the fact that Cobb's
mother killed his father in what may not have been an accident, during an incident that occurred because Mr. Cobb suspected
Mrs. Cobb of having an affair, shaped Ty's combative nature. What has been lost over the years is that Cobb became friendly
with Babe Ruth (common legend holding that he always hated him). Cobb was a shrewd millionaire investor who never needed
to work after baseball, therefore separating himself from regular contact with people while living in huge mansions that were
too big for him, after his wife left. Most telling is the relationship Cobb had with his two male children. He raised them
strictly, and because of baseball travel left much of the child rearing to his wife. When he retired, they were grown up
and on their own, and Cobb had genuine regrets for "missing" their childhood's. He wished he had been a doctor, so he could
have been home for his kids, and when one of his sons went into medicine, Cobb lamented that if he, too, were a doctor they
would have something in common. With all that baggage in tow, Cobb had to endure the premature deaths of both of the boys
from untimely illnesses, living the last 20-odd bitter years of his life blaming himself.
Cobb may have been hard to
live with, but this book empathetically explains some of the demons that drove the man into becoming a brilliant stock manipulator,
a taskmaster father, an unfeeling husband, a reviled teammate, a hated opponent, and in the opinion of those who saw him,
perhaps the greatest baseball player who ever lived!
ExcellentReview Date: 1999-03-06
The true historical record of CobbReview Date: 2000-07-05
Alexander details a complete Cobb. For all his faults Cobb was mannered and gracious in public (most of the time), a perfect host (if he liked you) and a generous philanthropist. This is the side most other Cobb bio's whitewash.
This book proves useful as a resource about Cobb. It details the facts about his life season by season. The only way to improve the book would be to add more detail and color to some of Cobb's exploits-- but then the book would have to be about 500 pages.
I consider this to be the primere biography of Ty Cobb. However, those looking mostly for anidotes, stories and that harsh personality brought to life might want to check out Al Stumps' "Cobb". I suggest reading both to develop the full image of the Greatest innovator baseball has ever seen.
A fascinating biograph about baseball's legendReview Date: 2000-02-28
The author described well enough for me to understand 1900-1910's players, ballparks, other circumstances around baseball.
I sincerely recommend this book to all the baseball fans.

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The Best Of The Instant ReviewsReview Date: 2005-10-03
Something to enjoyReview Date: 2000-04-15
Great book about one of the greatest teams ever!Review Date: 1999-02-12
A captivating review of a team of destiny; The New York YankReview Date: 1998-12-19
Awsome!Review Date: 1999-11-28

Go ahead and laughReview Date: 2008-07-05
Started great, but left me dry at the endReview Date: 2005-05-06
The author let me down on this one.
Wonderful Baseball Book--InspirationalReview Date: 2008-02-02
Another aspect of this book is to practice correctly and keep at it. Elgin practiced all the time! He played fastpitch in the alley or practiced with a pitching machine in the basement that he adjusted to throw really fast. Anyone interested in little league or baseball would probably like this book. I enjoyed it very much!
Karen Arlettaz Zemek, author of "My Funny Dad, Harry"
The Best There Ever Way\sReview Date: 2006-03-03
A Homerun!Review Date: 2003-02-13

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Nice reference book not only for Mets fansReview Date: 2002-04-04
If you like the Mets or baseball, read this bookReview Date: 2002-03-19
Amazin' Met Memories Was Amazin'Review Date: 2002-03-20
Another Met MiracleReview Date: 2002-03-19
This is an enjoyable and fascinating chronicle of 40 sometimes great, often frustrating years.
Perhaps my biggest kick, however, came from Bud Harrelson's wonderful and honest introduction. It alone makes the book a great buy, and brought back for this original Met fan many fond memories of the '69 Miracle Mets.
A Loge Seat Behind The Plate On A Perfect July NightReview Date: 2002-03-22
Collectible price: $60.00

A MUST read for any Coach or player !!!!Review Date: 2008-03-05
This book De-bunks a lot of the 'Red Herrings' of Hitting folklore. I am constantly amazed as a player and coach how much out and out, wrong information is out there.
Lau wrote this book right at the advent of the use of video. He was the first person to analyze a swing in all it's entirety. He not only came up with the '10 absolutes' but he points out what is NOT important...(stance,elbows up,staying back...whatever that means?)
No more 'squashing butterflies and squishing bugs'....
He speaks of the importance of:
Rhythm,weight shift
You Hit off of your FRONT foot.
You go back to get forward!
You do not keep your eye on the ball....Your head goes down when you swing.
and all importantly...tough as nails Charlie LAU talking about what most guys don't want to...fear and tension in hitting.
etc,etc,etc.
I was struggling at the plate when I bought this book. I was a power hitting .200 pull hitter. I retired from adult ball,hitting twice that. More importantly I taught everything I learned in this book to my son who has won a few league batting titles,though he still gets the occasional snide remark about how his swing 'looks' (LOL!)
I have taught many sub .150 hitting kids how to hit .400...it always lights up a kids face to find out I don't give a darn where his elbow is (or how many bugs he squashes)
I recently stepped into a cage after not having touched a bat in over a year. I drilled 10 consecutive line drives into the L-screen. I thought of Charlie's ghost smiling down as I imagined 'hitting the pitcher in the forehead' and driving it 'back through the box'
Charlie lives forever!!
I know this book isn't cheap because it's so hard to find (they need to reprint it!!)
BUT... It'll be worth every penny !!
-solpig
Total Results! Incredible Book!Review Date: 2006-12-21
I owe my self-esteem to this bookReview Date: 2000-09-12
It was a lot of work, more work than any 12-year-old could could have undertaken without the guidance of an equally determined adult. But my Dad and I realized that hitting was a process, a method that could be learned. Lau taught that everything I had been told -with horrible results- was in fact wrong. You don't judge whether a pitch is a strike and then swing; you start your swing and let your reflexes hold you back. You don't swing hard with your arms; you swing easy and get your power from your whole body.
All spring we worked on it, practicing in the garage, spending literally hundreds of dollars at batting cages working on mechanics. That very next season, I was hitting the ball better, and I only improved from there. By the end of that season, I was a certified leadoff terror. My team won its league title thanks to a game-winning single by yours truly. I even hit a few home runs (by not trying to, as Lau teaches). I was deliriously happy.
Even since then I've been a good hitter. Not a power hitter (I'm much too small), but a solid doubles guy with surprising pop. What I learned from this book kept me in organized baseball through Babe Ruth and high school (simultaneously), college, and semi-professional leagues. I am a hideously slow runner who soon after puberty had to give up dreams of playing professionally, but to this day I can step in front of a pitcher or pitching machine -cold- and drive the ball. This book taught me how. If you really want to hit a baseball, buy it, read it, internalize it, and put your faith in it. It will serve you well.
great hitter's bookReview Date: 2001-07-27
Hitter's Best FriendReview Date: 2003-05-11
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