Baseball Books


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Baseball Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Baseball
Mighty Jackie: The Strike-Out Queen
Published in Hardcover by Simon & Schuster/Paula Wiseman Books (2004-01-27)
Author: Marissa Moss
List price: $16.95
New price: $6.74
Used price: $5.50
Collectible price: $35.00

Average review score:

A Wonderful Story...A Beautiful Picture Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-31
This is a great picture book for big and little baseball fans and for all our daughters. This book is based on the true story of Jackie Mitchell, who at seventeen years of age struck out Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, in the same inning no less!

My husband is a huge baseball fan and he'd never heard this story before.
We both love it and so do our kids.

Mighty Jackie The Strike-Out Queen Book Review
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-27
Mighty Jackie is great book for young readers to be introduced to short biographies. This David and Goliath account of Jackie Mitchell is almost unheard of to avid sports enthusiasts. This is a great way to show young children that no matter what gender you are, hard work will pay off for those who try to reach their goals. Illustrator C.F. Payne had very good depictions of the baseball greats from the past that Mighty Jackie made history with in 1931.

Read Aloud Honor Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-04
April 2, 1931 was an important day in baseball history. On this day the Chattanooga Lookouts played the New York Yankees in an exhibition game. Thousands packed the stadium to see Lookouts' pitcher, seventeen-year-old Jackie Mitchell, pitch against the Yankees using her "lefty pitch with a low dip." Jackie made baseball history because she was the first professional female pitcher. This slice-of-life biography explains how Jackie grew up playing ball with her father and how at age eight she learned to pitch from Dazzy Vance, a star pitcher for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

The mixed media colored illustrations show movement and emotion. The full-page close-ups captures the intensity of players when the umpire yells "strike three." Jackie, surrounded by male players, looks undaunted and determined.

Just the cover of the book alone excited eight to twelve year olds. Children listened intently to the story and talked about the book with excitement. They thought it was great to have a female pitcher and yelled "strike three!"

A homerun of a bibliography for emerging readers!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-04-07
Covering the amazing achievements of one of the finest pitchers - woman or man - of all times, Jackie Mitchell, this picture-book biography is sure to fly off the shelves and engage even emerging readers, with it's intense, bright illustrations and cliff-hanging text. The story centers around Jackie's determination and hard work to become a great pitcher, fighting sexist discrimination and bad press. It's a tale of what someone can do with their dream, and would be an inspiration to all young people, ballplayers or not. The illustrations perfectly complement the text, and serve to make the story more intense and easy to relate to. This would be a great read-aloud for any classroom or library story time, and might be used to inspire older children to write stories of times they persevered with their dreams. Book has an author's note that lets kids know what happened to Jackie later on and a brief bibliography in the end papers.

The Girl with the Dreams
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-08
Jackie Mitchell set high goals and dreams to become a professional major-league baseball player. Even though there were the stereotypes about girls not playing baseball, she didn't let that hinder her determination in becoming her very best. Through hard-work and lots of training, she became a major league pitcher. On April 2, 1932 she carved her name into history by becoming known as the "Girl Who Struck Out Babe Ruth." This book depicts that the support of family and the determination of a girl, dreams are possible. This book does a fantastic job to portray the history of Jackie Mitchell in her major-league debut, but also gives information pertaining to her minor-league career and also baseball's formal ban of women from major and minor league. The illustrations make the reader feel that they are sitting in all different areas of a baseball field from right behind home plate to the outfield. I would definitely recommend this book when studying about influential females in history.

Baseball
Minor Players, Major Dreams
Published in Paperback by Bison Books (1996-12-01)
Author: Brett Mandel
List price: $22.95
New price: $13.93
Used price: $4.60

Average review score:

An Honest Account of Life in the Minor Leagues
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-12
Brett Mandel does an excellent job of portraying a year with the Ogden Raptors of the short-season Pioneer League. This is a well written, easy-to-read account of the ups and downs of life in the low minors. At times it is funny, at other times touching. I found myself pulling for him to get into a few more games than he did, but at least he's had an experience not many of us get. Good work on this book!

Mandel gives an accurate account of life in the low minors.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1997-12-18
Mandel's account of low level minor league baseball is right on target! The dream of making it to the major leagues is seen through many perspectives: a high draft pick who sustained an injury, two players who were released as twenty year olds, and college players who did not get drafted. The author shows how these players are trying to use independent baseball as a means to get into an affiliated organization. The author relates well with the average ball player who had their major dreams taken away after high school or college. This book is a must read for fans and players who want to know the truth about minor league baseball.

Can't put it down
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-12
What can I say? I read this book in three days. Couldn't put it down. Before I found out about this book, I actually had a similar idea. Except mine would have been more photography than writing. Anyway.....Mandel was able to bring the prospective from the player's standpoint. For a guy who never wrote a book before, he did a fantastic job of making you feel part of the team. I am very jealous of his experience. Anyone who's a baseball fan....this is a must read. Especially after you been to a couple of minor league games to know some of the quaint features he talks about. I've read no greater baseball book.

A MUST read for baseball wannabes and couldabeens
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-05
Brett Mandel, the self-proclaimed worst player in professional baseball, paints a telling portrait of life in the lowest of the minor leagues, with a brand-new independent team, the Ogden Raptors. The horrible hotel rooms and the endless bus rides, complete with entertainment, the encouraging foster family and discouraged teammates are presented in a way sure to open the eyes of anyone who wants to or wishes they had played professional baseball. He profiles the people he meets during his sabbatical year, warts and all, while demonstrating uncommon restraint. As grinding as the trip may have been at times, it's clear that Brett enjoyed his turn as a Raptor, would probably do it again in a Philadelpha minute.

Oh dear god - what an awesome book!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-08
What a wonderful book! I picked this one up, and it stayed in my stack of books to read for about 6 months. That was a mistake - I should have read it first. This is a great book if you're a fan of baseball, particularly if you're a fan of minor league baseball. This tells the story of Brett's year with the Ogden Raptors in 1994 from the start to the end of the season. Brett's writing style is very easy to read. I tend to do most of my reading before going to bed at night, which usually means I can take several sessions to actually finish a book, as I did with this one. Most books suffer from when you pick them up again, it's not that easy to jump right in where you left off. This one does not have that. For me, it lent itself great to reading it in chunks. Brett was on the Raptors for a whole year, and this book is his recollection of the travels, details, and behind the scenes things most people will never hear about. Check this out - this book has nothing to do with the Texas Rangers (my favourite team), but it's a great GREAT baseball book!

As an added bonus, I met the author last year when my wife & I went to Baltimore to see the Rangers play there. Brett and some friends were coming back from Cooperstown for the HOF induction ceremony, and were in Baltimore to see the Orioles play. He himself told me about the book, and we had a few moments talking about the Phillies, as we're both from there. I wish I would have already read the book at this point, but Brett was a great guy to meet in person, too!

Baseball
Past Time: Baseball As History
Published in Paperback by Oxford University Press, USA (2001-05-24)
Author: Jules Tygiel
List price: $18.95
New price: $11.79
Used price: $8.25
Collectible price: $57.96

Average review score:

provocative, enjoyable synthesis of baseball and history
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-15
When Professory Jules Tygiel presented his authoritative analysis of Jackie Robinson in "Baseball's Great Experiment," he gave notice that writing about baseball could not only reflect history but provide lovers of the "national game" a sense of how baseball reflected and influenced the society in which they live. His most recent effort, "Past Time," is a splendid integration of baseball and the dominant social and economic themes resonating around and through the sport. Written in nine chapters, each representing an inning/era in baseball's past, Professor Tygiel explores numerous athletic and historical themes in a beautifully written and thoroughly researched volume. It belongs not only on shelves of those, like me, who love the sport, but those, like me, who believe that imaginative and provocative histories can help assist all of us in understanding who we are and how we became the way we are.

Readers could enjoy this volume by selecting any one of the chapters; although the work is presented chronologically, Professor Tygiel offers each "inning" as its own entity. The meticulous research that entered into his writing (the book has some twenty pages of footnotes) weaves seamlessly into truly graceful writing. As he would say of DiMaggio, "he makes it look easy." There are trenchant observations on baseball as business, on the place of a ballclub in a city's self-definition and how the media has enhanced and democratized the sport.

I especially enjoyed his talented analysis of the impact of media on the sport. From print journalism, which helped create fans to the advent of visual media (ably noted as "new ways of knowing") to the impact of electronic dissemination of information, baseball has enjoyed a symbiotic relationship with mass communication. I was most impressed with his description of Henry Chadwick, whose devotion to the scientific and reform ideas he saw as essential to baseball's success, the father of baseball statistics. Readers will no doubt delight remembering Chadwick's invention of the stories "batting average" when they consider the impact of Bill James' type of information in their modern sensibilities.

There are nuggets of unmitigated delight here as well. Tygiel wonderously describes Babe Ruth becoming mute during an early radio interview and having his voice replaced by the moderator; nobody knew the difference and many commented on how well Ruth spoke. Then, Tygiel gives an absolutely fascinating commentary on Russ Hodges' famous "The Giants win the pennant" call after Bobby Thompson hit his "shot heard 'round the world." Not only that, he provides insight into how a prescient statistic analyst, Dodger employee Allan Roth, sadly predicted the very homerun which upset his beloved team.

Written with a love of the sport, a respect for the glorious cadences of the human voice and a knowledge of the political, economic and social interaction of sport and society, "Past Time" will emerge as one of the essential works on baseball every fan of the game and of the country will want to own.

Baseball as America, because Baseball is America
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-14
I must start with the disclaimer: I am an unabashed fan of Baseball. To some of us, there is so much about Baseball which parallels the growth and development of our country. Jules Tygiel does an admirable job of linking some of Baseball's magic moments with the spirit of the times, and interweaves the two in a fascinating piece of work.

The history of some of the early magnates of the game (Comiskey, Mack and McGraw) parallels some of the other early captains of industry, and understanding how they did what they did explains much of how we have moved from agrarian society to industrial capitalism. The segregation of the Negro Leagues and the ultimate integration of the game are richly explored, set with the backdrop of the issue of race in America.

"The Shot Heard Round The World" was certainly one of the games greatest moments. But I had never thought of it in terms of the "post-war pre-eminence" (some, including the author might instead say the "arrogance") of America, and the place of New York as the center of the world (I guess the moniker "Mediteranian" had been already taken several centuries prior).

Easy reading. A great gift for those who have an interest in the game which goes deeper than what can be found in tomorrow morning's box scores.

Fascinating
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-20
What a treat! Tygiel presents nine loosely-connected essays on various aspects of baseball and their interrelation with other aspects of American history and social change. With a historian's eye for detail and mind for interpretation, each chapter presents gems of insight that even serious students of baseball history will find intriguing. Tygiel's writing style, as befits a professor of history, is intelligent, literate, and persuasive, but never dry. The "short-story" format works well, and provides opportunity for reflection--although readers may have a hard time not just moving on to the next "inning." Reflecting Tygiel's academic background, the essays are impeccably researched and lavishly footnoted, with many primary sources cited. This book is a must for fans of baseball, and for fans of US history--for fans of both, buy the hardback, and reserve a place of honor for it on your bookshelf. You'll want to read it over again, for this book's only major drawback is the lack of extra innings.

Move Over, Herodotus
Helpful Votes: 25 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-03
Jules Tygiel, one of America's finest historians and citizens, died the day before yesterday, July 1 2008, after a three year tussle with cancer. He was a good friend; his son and mine were high school classmates, and had played against each other in Little League baseball. Jules and I were third-base coaches for their opposite teams. Jules taught history at San Francisco State University from 1978 until this year, doing the labor of Sisyphus to maintain intellectual excitement at that wounded school, which was so exciting when he started there but which was dampered and hampered by its Republican political foes. Jules's two historical concentrations were the social history of baseball and the social/economic history of America in the 1920s. His graduate seminar in the latter was described to me again and again as the most exciting history class at SFSU.

Jules wrote a concise, even-handed biography of Ronald Reagan - "Ronald Reagan and the Triumph of American Conservatism - a book that acknowledges Reagan's political skills yet clearly depicts the inconsistencies and shortcomings of his two terms as president. Jules also wrote "The Great Los Angeles Swindle: Oil, Stocks and Scandal During the Roaring Twenties," but his most widely-read books were about baseball, which he loved not only as a sport but as an aspect of America's better nature. Born in Brooklyn in 1949, Jules grew up a passionate Dodgers fan; ironically, he spent most of his career living within a few minutes of the SF Giants ballparks.

Jules first published "Baseball's Great Experiment: Jackie Robinson and His Legacy" in 1983. That book has been reprinted consistently, awarded the Robert F Kennedy Book Award, and acclaimed by Sports Illustrated Magazine as one of the top 50 sports books of all time, yet it's hardly about baseball as a sport at all. It's a history of Jim Crow discrimination, and of the foresight and courage of Branch Rickey and Jackie Robinson in defying America's inveterate racism. Jules rightly considered the integration of baseball one of the defining and enabling acts of civil rights history. Hall of Fame second baseman Joe Morgan, an African American, has called this book his favorite ever about Robinson, and said Tygiel's book "showed us exactly how we got to where we were."

"Past Time: Baseball as History" is a broader study of American society as perceived through the lens of our national pastime. It looks at racial divides, of course, but it also examines the American fascination with statistics and efficiency, at the evolving class structure of America, at urbanization as evidenced by professional sports, at the transportation and marketing revolutions that accompanied the rise of professional sports, and at the psychology of a nation of "good sports." It's a deep and original book, this "Past Time," and one that I would put first on my reading list if I were a professor of history at any level.

If the USA appreciated its intellectual heroes as much as its military, the Major Leagues would declare a moment of silence at every baseball park in America this Fourth of July, and Jules would be buried with honors under third base at Dodgers stadium.

The Best
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-09
I probably grew up in "the middle" of baseball history avidly watching "my" Giants at the Polo Grounds and on channel 11 out of New York. In those days the Dodgers and Giants played each other 22 times a season and they were some of the best baseball wars imaginable.

Jules Tygiel maticulously and fascinatingly brings the history of baseball alive from its' beginnings up to "THE" homerun hit by Bobby Thompson in l951. Unlike other authors, however, he intigrates the progress of baseball with its intersection and influence on the progress of society. It is an unforgettable history lesson written in a crisp fashion that allows easy reading.

The last third of the book traces the dramatic changes in professional baseball that brings us the game we know today where arch rivals play a maximum of eight to ten games per year against each other and players continually rotate from team to team seeking the best dollar.

Whether you enjoy today's game as well the past where there were two leagues of eight teams each is irrelevent. Baseball, in the form it is played in 2000,is establishing permanentcy and likely to change little save for further expansion. Jules Tygiel's "Past Time" lets us understand the how and why the changes in the past fifty years have occurred. Like it or not - it sure is nice to know!

Finally, one of the best baseball books I have ever read.

Baseball
Play Ball! Baseball Scorebook
Published in Spiral-bound by Triple E Productions (2001-02-01)
Author: Eric Enders
List price: $14.95

Average review score:

Spiral bound gift from God
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-02-27
FINALLY!! True baseball fans now have available a scorebook that doesn't look like a ten-year-old's exercise with a ruler. This book is obviously made by a baseball fan for the baseball fan. It has the most intuitive format of any scoresheet I have seen, and makes full use of the whole page, giving individual scorers -- and their individual scoring methods -- the most flexibility. The scoresheet contains so much information that the reader could create the most complex of boxscores -- indeed, could practically recreate the game in its entirety -- long after the original event is forgotten.

The only downside to this volume is the lack of a linescore, but where would you put it?

Scorebooks are history books, perhaps the only pencil sketched accounts of our past still widely applied in modern American culture. If you're looking, as I am, to keep your baseball autobiography, I highly recommend doing it with this tablet.

A Home Run
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-06
A terrific value for any baseball fan who keeps score at games. Easy to use and fits my old fashion style as well as other approaches to scoring.

a solid workmanlike book
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-23
This is a solid, workmanlike scorebook, concentrating on the fundamentals. I particularly like the fact that it is printed on good quality paper, adding to the sensuous pleasure of the experience. I give it four rather than five stars simply because the only perfect scorebook would be one I designed myself, and it would only be perfect for me. Scoring baseball is such a personal, idiosyncratic activity that no two people want exactly the same book. For example, I like having space to track each hitter's count. This is not included here, though there is enough room to fake it. Instead there are boxes for each hitter to mark an out or an RBI. To my thinking this is a poor use of space, as these are derived from the main scoring space. These are nits, however. Short of designing and printing your own, this is a good a book as you are likely to find.

Best scorebook you can find--anywhere!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-30
As a lifelong baseball fan, I have always wanted a good scorebook where I can chronicle all the games I attend in one place. But all the books I found were either designed with softball in mind, or used a design that emphasized one particular style of scorekeeping. I had just about given up my search and resigned myself to a life of buying team programs at 5 bucks a pop when I came across Play Ball.

For my purposes, it is perfect. With 170 scoresheets, you know it's going to last for quite a while. And the design provides for plenty of space for substitutions, with room for over 70 substitutions per game! And best yet, the design is not intrusive, it does not try to force a particular style of scorekeeping down your throat, but let's you dictate your own style.

If you like keeping score, this book is a bargain.

A true work of art
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-11
I have always thought of scorekeeping a baseball game as an artistic endeavor. Everyone has their own style, making hundred of scoresheets done for the same ballgame unique. Each one revealing different aspects of the game just played. The description and detail that go into each one can be truly remarkable.

The Play-ball! Baseball scorebook by Eric Enders provides the scorer with the structure to properly score a baseball game, but enough space and flexibility to to include their own flair and panache. I've already scored a few dozen games of this year's baseball season and am amazed at the results. The orgasmic feeling of pencil hitting paper to record Pedro's 16-strikeout game or Aramis Ramirez's 3 home runs at Enron Field has only been enhanced by the Play ball! Scorebook's design.

Take this opportunity to start up the hobby of scorekeeping or enhance the one you already have.

Baseball
Prophet of the Sandlots: Journeys With a Major League Scout
Published in Paperback by Simon & Schuster (Paper) (1991-03)
Author: Mark Winegardner
List price: $9.95
Used price: $9.75

Average review score:

Wonderful and accurate story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-25
This book is a very accurate depiction of Tony Lucadello and what baseball scouts were all about. It tells the story of a man who truly loved the game of baseball and embodied everything that is good about the sport. It also has many amusing stories that Tony used to like to tell about his years in the game.This is a must read for any fan of baseball!

A great journey
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-17
This is a very good book, and a great counterpoint to the statistical emphasis that comes across in Moneyball. From the revelation in the preface to the journey you take with Tony across Ohio and over the years, this book is tremendously engaging. It's one of the best baseball books I have ever read. And one other thing -- I'm going to take Tony's advice, and make sure my son has a wall.

Get it if you can
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-23
Friedman is a very talented writer, and has chosen a magnificent but largely unknown figure to profile in this book. Filled with humor (wry and otherwise), great insight into baseball, and some surprisingly sober turns in the road, this book will be perfect for any hot-stove leaguers. If you can get it.

A good contrast to Moneyball
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-06
The bestseller Moneyball should be read in conjunction with this book for two reasons. First, they are both enjoyable reads, written in dramatically different ways. Moneyball is like a group of interesting and informative short stories/magazine articles. Prophet of the Sandlots, on the other hand, is more like a lovingly crafted tale about an old-time baseball guy, that older gent sitting in the bleachers taking notes on the high school player. It is a story about a baseball life and serves as a tribute to a man and a bygone era.

Second, Prophet of the Sandlots reflects why the old-time baseball scouts are still essential to the talent evaluation aspect of the game. No matter how much statistical analysis is ever done, there is no substitute for the trained and experienced eyes of the Tony Lucadello's of the sport. These contrasts make Prophet of the Sandlots even more interesting, beyond the highly descriptive and evocative prose that Mark Winegardner utilizes to tell this touching story.

I read this book years ago and have recommended it often to not only baseball fans, but also to fans of good reading. Hopefully it will come back into print and will become readily available again.

Prophet of The Sandlots - Review
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-14
This is one of the better "first attempts" at baseball writing ever! Mark Winegardner spends a year w/ baseball's greatest scout and learns & shares all Tony Lucadello has to offer. Pre-draft Baseball is contrasted w/ post-draft Baseball. Several great pointers for baseball coaches and parents!!!! Prophet of the Sandlots (knowingly or otherwise) makes a very strong arguement that Baseball's HOF should make room for it's greatest scout ever.

This book is now out of print. This is unfortunate as it should be required reading for all fans of Baseball. I would make two recommendations to Mark Winegardner if a reprint is on the horizon- 1) Add photographs to the next edition. Ideas: Tony in his player's uniform, Tony at the gravesite of the Ohio born HOF'er, Tony's wedding pictures, Tony w/ Mike Schmidt, etc. 2) Add an index at the back listing people covered in the book w/ page numbers.

Baseball
Redbirds Revisited
Published in Hardcover by Bonus Books (1990-05-25)
Author: David Craft
List price: $19.95
New price: $11.75
Used price: $1.40

Average review score:

broad street bullies
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-02
the book was in great condition. and as a flyers fan, i am happy to have this book in my library.
thanks!

The best Flyers book, by the best ever play-by-play legend!
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-02
This book is probably the best history of the Flyers that you could find out there. Full Spectrum ranks right up there, but it doesn't have Mr. Heart's personality like SCORE! does. I'm gonna miss Gene.......

A must-read for Flyers fans!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-14
Having grown up a Flyers fan and hearing Gene Hart for many years, I loved this book. It's a great combination of how Gene became associated with the Flyers, as well as a timeline of the Flyers' history from the beginning up to the early 90's.

An Excellent Book by the Greatest Announcer
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-07
I first started listening to Gene Hart calling Flyers games in 1968. He was a wonderful announcer when the Flyers were mediocre and was absolutely superb when they were on top. I've heard a lot of sports broadcasting in a lot of cities around the country in the last 35 years and no one else in any sport approaches Gene's work. I was disappointed when he stopped announcing and deeply saddened with his passing last year. His book is every bit as fine as his radio and television work. Of the several Flyers books in print, his supasses the others in intimacy, first hand recollections and general nostalgic value. I sure miss Gene Hart, but this book and some tapes of television broadcasts he did are my most treasured sports memorabilia. He is a Hall of Famer and his writing belongs there too.

A MUST for Flyers Hockey Fans ! Long Live GENE HART !!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-07-20
No one can tell a story the way Gene Hart did. He made you feel as though you were a part of every experience he retells in this book. Gene's love & passion for the game of hockey and the Philadelphia Flyers is clearly evident in this book. Gene not only chronicles the Flyers history from their entrance into the NHL, he also gives you a deep insight into the pride and character of a close knit group of players. We are all truly enriched by Gene's efforts.

Baseball
Safe at Home
Published in Hardcover by Zondervan Publishing Company (2001-08-01)
Authors: Bob Muzikowski and Gregg Lewis
List price: $19.99
New price: $3.32
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $19.99

Average review score:

Inspiration
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-28
This is one of the most AMAZING books I have ever read. Touching, heartfelt and gutsy! I have passed this book on to many friends and they have all had the same response. One of those books that changes your outlook on pretty much everything.

An inspiring, TRUE story
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-04
I have known Bob Muzikowski for three years now, and he never ceases to amaze me. Reading this book has been a revelation. If you're feeling cynical, or doubt that one man can make a difference in society, read this book. Muzikowski chronicles his life from a tough childhood to a self-destructive early adulthood through his current and permanent persona, a caring, compassionate person who genuinely wishes to spread goodwill. Hopefully, this story will inspire others to follow in Bob's footsteps, and love their neighbors. The narrative is alternately heartbreaking, hopeful, and humorous, but always honest. A seemingly endless parade of intriguing supporting "characters" add color and depth to Muzikowski's infectiously interesting vignettes. Rather than see the Keanu Reeves/Hollywood version, read the real thing. Pass it on!

WOW ... What a Ripple Effect
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-29
I never knew Bob Muzikowski ... nor did I know of the book prior to last month (April 2004). However, I was fortunate enough to meet this amazingly honest, articulate, straight-shooting gentleman [yes ... gentleman] at a prayer breakfast in Albany, NY. After hearing him speak [him being the featured speaker] and hearing his story I simply needed to know more. I spent a little time researching Bob and was interested in reading the book.

OK ... now for the book review ...
DON'T READ THIS STORY if you are not interested in changing your heart and mind for a greater good. THE RIPPLE EFFECT will occur in your heart as you realize the full potential each and every one of us has to better the lives of others. HHHMMM ... isn't that what Jesus taught?
AND if you're an Evangelical Christian, the story will either motivate you INTO service for Him or it will refresh your walk and current service.
Either way ... this story is SO MUCH BIGGER than Bob and his boys. It's a glimpse of the ON-GOING ACTIONABLE LOVE AND COMPASSION for everyone associated with Bob and Tina ... and for you and I? It's fuel for our hearts ... raw honesty, compassion and love seen through very tough circumstances and people.

BOTTOM LINE ... this book is an example of what God can do when a heart is willing to be transformed.
PS: Check out the Chicago Hope Academy ... a school opening in 2004 that was built on the fire and determination of these folks.

This true story deserves to be told!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-30
When Bob Muzikowski and I sat across from each other on a plane ride last September, I mostly listened as he told his story. As publisher for Zondervan, I knew by the time we landed I'd be asking him if he was interested in telling this story in print! The world is hungry for stories about "everyday heros" with whom we can actually identify. Bob is a regular guy who, in spite of a rough and tumble first few decades of life, has found a way to live an extraordinary life. His story reads like a novel but the inspiration that drives him is compelling and accessible to all of us. This is a book that you will not be able to just read. You will most definately encourage your adolescent children to read it and you will talk about it with your colleagues and friends. Trust me...for what started as an idle conversation on a plane last September is now a wonderful book that in just over a month is being read by thousands.

Batter Up!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-01
Although Bob Muzikowski's book, "Safe at Home," is catagorized as an autobiography, it is so much more! This book is a real life story of THE Author's plan for one man. Bob Muzikowski has shown us how one man (and woman, Tina!) can make a difference when he chooses to please an Audience of One - the blessings of God on Bob Muzikowski's life have been multiplied exponentially to others! "Safe at Home" has been described as "inspiring," but Bob's story will only be truly inspiring if it generates a response from its readers; one that takes them out of their comfortable church pews and into the God-prescribed place that He wants them to be! "Batter Up!" The choice is yours: you can take the challenge as the designated hitter or warm the bench in the dugout!

Baseball
The Scouting Notebook 1999 (Sporting News STATS Major League Scouting Notebook)
Published in Paperback by STATS Publishing (1999-02)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $0.75
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

This is THE Bible for Major League Baseball Information
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-18
If you have to choose just one book each year to give you as much information about the coming year in baseball: who the players are, who all the teams' prospects are, what they all did last year and a forecast of what they will do this year -- then this is THE book you should buy. Featuring analysis from some of the leading writers and analysts in the game this book has it all including situational stats and diagrams showing batter/hitter tendancies. Whether you are a ROTO-nerd, a Fantasy junkie, or (and I know there are some of you out there) a genuine baseball fan, you WILL love this book. It has it all!

A great resource!!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-08
The Scouting Notebook is an excellent book and a must-have for each new year for the true baseball fan. This book contains in-depth analysis of all regular major league players and many top prospects. It can give the reader an idea of what to expect based on past tendencies. A wonderful book!

A must for perpetual leagues.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-08
If your league allows for the retention of players from year to year, this is the book to get. As a fantasy owner, I have been collecting these books for over 10(?) years and I find them invaluable in trade negotiations or just picking up that extra infielder off the waiver wire. What this book gives me is not just the stats, but observations on why a batter is hitting like he is, or why a certain pitcher should be performing better.

Also, pull out the book while watching a game on TV, the pitching charts for both the pitcher and hitter add an enjoyable twist to the game.

A basic necessity for baseball fans.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-17
This is THE book for fantasy baseball nerds. This will be my third year in a row using this book as my primary tool preparing for draft day. But, you don't have to be stat crunching geek to enjoy it - the book will be enjoyed equally by "lovers of the game."

The Scouting Notebook 2000
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-06
For anyone out there who loves hard core baseball this book is for you. Every player from every team has a biography and a scouting report. If you did not know him before the season you will definately know him by spring training. This is a must for baseball fans.

Baseball
Searching for Heroes: The Quest of a Yankee Batboy
Published in Hardcover by Carlyn Publications (1995-03)
Author: Joseph R. Carrieri
List price: $22.00
New price: $18.95
Used price: $6.00
Collectible price: $22.00

Average review score:

Excellent
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-08-27
Searching for Heroes is a beyond excellent story. Joe Carrieri's experience being a Yankee batboy is every boy's dream and for him to actually live it must have been a feeling thats undescribable. He lived a childhood life with the greastest legends in baseball history. EXCELLENT!!!! Theres heroes and theirs legends, heroes get remembered and legends never DIE.

Amazing...
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-16
While unlike many other people who have read this book by seeing it on the shelf or being told how good it was I was told to read it by the author of it...Joe Carrieri. I met Joe on many occasions as I would work the morning shifts at the local Foodtown/Shoprite in the neighborhood and he would always be in every weekend. One day while talking about the yankees he told me about his bok and the next time I was in the book store I happened to see it so I bought it. It sat on my shelf for a few years and I forgot about it. But last night I happened to see it and had nothing to read and picked it up. Ti put it mildly I have never ead a book so fast in my life. The Book was absolutely amazing!!! I would reccommend this book to anyone! Joe if you read this I was the guy that always worked with Maria from about 1994-1998 my name is Louis Mancini and you did a great job!!!

inspirational
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-28
This book will make you yearn for the time that athletes felt a responsibilty to the fans. While not angels, the athletes of the 40s and 50s at least loved to play the game and had an innocent quality lacking in today's athletes, who are merely interested in their own pleasure, and don't even seem to enjoy it. This book will make you feel good.

Great read
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-24
My favorite story was that of the "case of the missing bat" It lead my mind to a better place, one of more simple time. I wounder who really has Al Rosen's bat????????

Sports as Inspiration.
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-01-07
Joe Carrieri's book, "Searching for Heroes, The Quest of a Yankee Batboy" is a wonderful picture of a great era in Yankee history. He was in a unique position as a youngster, some would say a dream spot. When he is instructed by Brother Columbo, his principal at St. Jerome's Grammar School, to interview baseball's most successful players as to the meaning of greatness in their own lives as a requirement to being excused from school, the reader is transported into a fantastic

world. Any youngster reading this is bound to be inspired and I can attest to this as a retired teacher.

I understand Mr. Carrieri has written another book entitled, "The Promise." It focuses on Joe Dimaggio. How perfect. The inspiration of Joltin Joe is legendary. Hopefully, Amazon will include "The Promise" in your catalogue and by doing so will help to inspire readers, young and old. Any chance of this happening soon?

Baseball
Small-Town Heroes: Images of Minor League Baseball
Published in Paperback by Bison Books (2003-10-01)
Author:
List price: $19.95
New price: $12.89
Used price: $0.69

Average review score:

Time travel with a baseball glove
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-04
The beauty of Hank Davis' book is that it operates on several levels at once -- as only the best works can.

On the surface, Small Town Heroes is the story of an older guy with enough spare time and discretionary income to get in his car and truck around eastern North America checking out minor league baseball teams. Players, managers, mascots, front office people, concession workers -- each has a story to tell. These stories interweave to form the tapestry that is minor league baseball today.

On a deeper level, Davis' investigations facilitate the contemplation of bigger issues, beginning with the realization that, ultimately, all travel is time travel. It is fascinating to watch Davis collide head on with (friendly) ghosts from his middle 20th century childhood even as he encounters a new generation of "instant" stadiums hastily assembled from the remnants of discarded beer cans.

Deeper still is the responsibility of an emerging generation of elders to preserve and protect that indigenously North American optimism that baseball has always represented and that minor league baseball today can help us preserve. Our heritage was never predicated on the whims of spoiled brat millionaires and self important corporate moguls in luxury sky boxes. As Davis points out time and again, relief from such nonsense is only as far away as your local minor league ballfield.

My only regret is that Davis' book cannot go on forever and cover every location. As both a Royals/Golden Spikes and CWS fan, I would enjoy Davis' perspective on Omaha's precious Johnny Rosenblatt Stadium.

Meanwhile, anyone afflicted with parents, spouses or others irritated by "valium ball" who routinely admonish you to "grow up" and burn your bats and gloves so you can get out in the back yard and build them a new patio -- you need only hand those offenders a copy of Small Town Heroes and let Davis show them why such requests cannot and must never be granted.

Finally, if you're a "Field of Dreams" fan, consider this to be a book about multiple successful examples of the "if you build it, they will come" scenario.

(POP!) ...and you can tell that one goodbye!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-13
Well, beat the drum and hold the phone-the sun came out today! We're born again, there's new grass on the field.........Well, I spent some time in the Mudville Nine, watchin' it from the bench............. Hank Davis has a hit! Reading Small-Town Heroes gives one much the same feeling as listening to Fogerty belting out Centerfield.

Davis does an excellent job of exposing the heart, soul, and emotions of those immersed in making a minor league team a reality. The struggle of emotions and the psychic battles faced by players, managers, coaches, mascots, fans, vendors, and other personnel involved in making the game "come off" are, many times, missed by the typical fan. Davis puts you "in the head" of the new kid just getting off the bus in eastern Tennessee and guides you through his experiences and journies. He then leads you on an expedition of the mind, emotions, and ego of the 27-year-old coming down from The Show for a last trip through the minors.

Davis's style makes you cheer for guys and teams that you have never seen-nor, in many instances, heard of. You feel the sense of urgency in getting the next hit or lowering the ERA with the next strike out. You feel the humanity of men ready become superstars as well as those about to plunge into "the agony of defeat". Hank Davis distinguishes and translates the subtleties of conversation in the dugout and batting practice that are concealed or ambiguous for most. His understanding and empathy flow clearly and vividly through to the pages of Small-Town Heroes.

Hank Davis leaves the reader with his opinion of the state of the baseball, and the minors in particular. He has an explicit assessment and is not hesitant about sharing it. He is the kind of guy I would like to sit next to and share a beer with at Graniger Stadium in Kinston, North Carolina on a hot August night!

Tours of small towns, minor league parks, and geography are accurately and realistically portrayed for the reader. Local flavor, as illustrated by Davis, can almost be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, and felt. He presents all the characters-those not likely seen by a visitor and those taken for granted by the locals. From "Mom" and the "Mountain Man" to the groupies, mascots, ground crew, hotel desk clerks, waitresses, and guards-"the whole cast"--Davis introduces you to each. Others have attempted tours similar to Davis only to commit error after error-Davis gets a hit!

Can't Put It Down
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-09
This is an excellent read from start to finish. Davis really captures the essence of the minor league experience from the perspective of players, employees and fans. Baseball fans will love it, and non-fans will still be caught up in the many personalities profiled here.

Great look at life in the Minor Leagues!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-11
Hank Davis has done a marvelous job in this view of life in (and around) the minor leagues. His sense of humor comes through many times. This was probably the easiest reading book of this length (354 pages)that I've encountered. It just flows! One of the things that I liked most about the book was not only the liberal use of photographs, but their placement. Every photo was within a page of the corresponding verbage. In summary, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Each and every page was interesting, entertaining, or informative. As a visitor to approximately 30 minor league parks myself, Davis enabled me to "revisit" many of those parks. Job well done, Mr. Davis!

(POP!) ...and you can tell that one goodbye!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-09-13
Well, beat the drum and hold the phone-the sun came out today! We're born again, there's new grass on the field.........Well, I spent some time in the Mudville Nine, watchin' it from the bench............. Hank Davis has a hit! Reading Small-Town Heroes gives one much the same feeling as listening to Fogerty belting out Centerfield.

Davis does an excellent job of exposing the heart, soul, and emotions of those immersed in making a minor league team a reality. The struggle of emotions and the psychic battles faced by players, managers, coaches, mascots, fans, vendors, and other personnel involved in making the game "come off" are, many times, missed by the typical fan. Davis puts you "in the head" of the new kid just getting off the bus in eastern Tennessee. He then gives you a tour of the mind, emotions, and ego of the 27-year-old coming down from The Show for a last trip through the minors.

Davis's style makes you cheer for guys and teams that you have never seen-nor, in many instances, heard of. You feel the sense of urgency in getting the next hit or lowering the ERA with the next strike out. You feel the humanity of men ready become superstars as well as those about to plunge into "the agony of defeat". Hank Davis distinguishes and translates the subtleties of conversation in the dugout and batting practice that are concealed or ambiguous for most. His understanding and empathy flow clearly and viv-idly through to the pages of Small-Town Heroes.

Hank Davis leaves the reader with his opinion of the state of the baseball, and the minors in particular. He has an explicit assessment and is not hesitant about sharing it. He is the kind of guy I would like to sit next to and share a beer with at Graniger Stadium in Kinston, North Carolina on a hot August night!

Tours of small towns, minor league parks, and geography are accurately and realistically portrayed for the reader. Local flavor, as illustrated by Davis, can almost be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, and felt. He presents all the characters-those not likely seen by a visitor and those taken for granted by the locals. From "Mom" and the "Mountain Man" to the groupies, mascots, ground crew, hotel desk clerks, waitresses, and guards-"the whole cast"--Davis introduces you to each. Others have attempted tours similar to Davis only to commit error after error-Davis gets a hit!


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