Baseball Books
Related Subjects: People Instruction History Sabermetrics Negro Leagues News and Media Directories Officiating Organizations Fan Pages Major League Minor League Amateur High School Youth Women College and University
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Used price: $16.75

Great Children's Book, yet still one of my favoritesReview Date: 2008-08-02
Big Ken Griffy JrReview Date: 2001-09-18
how Ken Griffy Jr. played baseball. His old teamates Alex Rodriguez, Edgar Martinez and Tino Martinez really wanted him to stay in Seattle.
Now he's meeting new teammates like Barry Larkin,Sean Casy,
and Pokey Resse. He's still getting in the playoffs.His father
wanted him in Cincinati. Ken said the Yankees are so easy to beat. He still misses the Mariners.
If You Like a LefteyReview Date: 2000-11-15
An exciting and fabulous book!Review Date: 1999-10-04

Review from an 11 year old Catholic homeschoolerReview Date: 2007-05-07
AwesomeReview Date: 2006-11-18
It was really informative and I really enjoyed reading it.
Babe Ruth- An All American HeroReview Date: 2001-04-01
Great book for baseball loversReview Date: 2001-06-06

Used price: $0.68

Handy referenceReview Date: 2006-09-14
Full of interesting tidbits.
This book is excellent except for 2 nagging items.Review Date: 1997-11-15
A "must have" for any baseball fan.Review Date: 1997-01-14
A complete history of major league baseball franchisesReview Date: 1997-12-06


Relive the truly great years . . . .Review Date: 2006-11-27
It was a great book.Review Date: 1999-01-04
Superb! The ultimate Orioles book.Review Date: 1999-05-11
Never Forget Your Roots - A 33rd Street MemoryReview Date: 2000-05-14

Used price: $7.50

Move over WP Kinsella - there's a new kid on the blockReview Date: 1999-09-22
LIFE LESSON BOOK, FOR ALL.Review Date: 1998-07-09
an excellent piece about lifeReview Date: 1997-11-28
Honest, Thoughtful, WonderfulReview Date: 2004-05-25

Used price: $3.12

It brings together past and present Baseball historyReview Date: 1999-01-16
This is a great way to commemorate the fantastic 1998 Baseball season. It also makes a great coffee table book.
Tops them all!Review Date: 1999-01-07
THE AUCTION OF THE CENTURY, BIGGER THAN KENNEDYReview Date: 1998-12-26
This book brings together Past and Present Baseball HistoryReview Date: 1999-01-22
The catalog also makes a great coffee table book.

Used price: $0.01

My son loves this bookReview Date: 2008-08-28
Offbeat, whacky and uniqueReview Date: 2001-10-21
This book made me laugh out loud!Review Date: 2000-09-01
Even after my daughter outgrows the book, we plan to keep it in our library!
A charming story for kids who love dinosaurs and baseball...Review Date: 2000-06-11

Used price: $20.97

Think you know it all, try againReview Date: 2007-06-02
Great all in one coaches guide...Review Date: 2007-06-01
Baseball Coach's Survival GuideReview Date: 2007-01-03
Packed with useful information.Review Date: 1999-08-16

Used price: $6.11
Collectible price: $59.99

From the baselines to the headlinesReview Date: 2003-09-15
I've looked at all the headlines in this book and skimmed some of the stories, but I still haven't read an appreciable portion of the book as a whole.
The detail is so great, and the print on the older newspapers is so small that one really would have to have the luxury of time to read the whole thing.
Essentially, the book is a collection of baseball-theme newspaper headlines from 1857 to 1999. One can appreciate just how far back in time this book takes him when he sees a 1918 Boston Post headline that reads, *Red Sox Are Again World's Champions.*
The RED SOX? Baseball's world champions? AGAIN??????
Now THAT'S ancient history.
But this just isn't a baseball book, and those who can tolerate the baseball but whose historical interests lie elsewhere will take interest in the other slices of Americana that often lie side-by-side with the baseball stories.
The Red Sox story above is actually overshadowed by a headline about 13,000,000 additional draft registrants being called up, even as victory over the Kaiser is within reach.
Right next to the Milwaukee Daily News headline from October 14, 1908 declaring *Cubs Again Champions of the World* (another example of ancient history) is a political cartoon lampooning President Teddy Roosevelt.
The 1921 acquittal of the Chicago *Black Sox* players of conspiring to throw the 1919 World Series accompanies another story about the death of singer Enrico Caruso.
A 1948 headline in the Washington Afro American announcing forty-something Satchel Paige's belated call-up to the major leagues also includes an editorial criticizing Harry Truman's civil rights policies and announcing the assassination of a Haitian editor of a pro-government newspaper.
*Going away?* the ad in the lower left-hand corner asks. *Be sure that the Afro goes with you.*
Ads for tobacco (*Rabbitt Maranville says, *Blackstone is the best smoke on the big league circuit*), chewing gum (*it's good and it's good for you,* the Wrigley's Spearmint Gum ad advises), and health-enhancing elixirs also predominate.
A 1951 story in the Kansas City Star about the boyish Mickey Mantle's standing as heir apparent to the great DiMaggio also proudly announces Satin School Jackets (regularly selling for $7.95) on sale for $4.98. 1951 model Dodges are available at Midwest Motors for only $1666.17.
Moon Mullins and other retro comic strip characters also dot these pages. *Whadd'ya mean he's beginning to get to you?* an irate boxing manager demands of his fighter in the middle of an empty arena. *He's been and gone!* Now THAT'S another animated boxing manager who also isn't going to be saying *we* anytime soon.
There's even a measure of eeriness about some of these headlines. Everyone knows that Joe DiMaggio's famous 56 game hitting strike took place in the pre-war environment that was the 1941 baseball season, so it's startling to see a number of San Francisco Chronicle headlines tracking his hitting streak - that are dated in 1933.
The answer, of course, is that years before DiMaggio electrified the nation with his 56-game streak, he was raising eyebrows on the West Coast with a 61-game streak for the Pacific Coast League's San Francisco Seals. Incredibly, the Chronicle repeatedly gets his name wrong, spelling it as *De Maggio*. The man was born on Fisherman's Wharf, after all. He was a San Francisco native son.
And in another Twilight Zonish moment from 1920, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle proclaims that *Hank Gherrig* (whose bases-loaded homerun won the game for his local high-school) is the Babe Ruth of high school baseball.
The subject, of course, is Lou Gehrig who would set the all-time record for grand slam homeruns (it still stands today) and who would later join Babe Ruth in the Yankees lineup to make up what might still be the greatest homerun-hitting tandem of all time.
Yes, if you've got this collection with you, you have tremendous incentive to find a desert island to be stranded on.
Of course, the stories from the more recent years can be passed over. And retro-baseball also contains some sobering food for thought: 50 years from now; 80-100 years from now; will baseball fans from the future pour over headlines about Darryl Strawberry, Frank Thomas, Alex Rodriguez, Garry Sheffield, and Will Clark - and modernist madness outside the world of baseball - with the same misty glow?
If you are into old-school this is for you!Review Date: 2000-12-02
A must have if you love baseballReview Date: 2002-02-08
For seniors only?Review Date: 2001-03-02


A 'must have' for fantasy baseballReview Date: 2003-01-01
Shh! Don't tell anyone in your league about this book!Review Date: 2002-04-04
Invaluable Fantasy GuideReview Date: 2002-05-05
Save yourself a lot of time and buy the only fantasy guide you need to buy. This book is not a rehash of the "same old junk" as all the others seem to be. It breaks down the reasons to grab people nobody knows about and goes "inside the numbers."
This is my new best friend that nobody will know about but me. I just hope the cover lasts all year!!
The best player analysis bar none.Review Date: 2002-01-02
Shandler uses sabermetic principles to look at all players who played in the majors last season. The book is orgainzed by player alphabetically, dividing hitter and pitchers. There are some general articles on fantasy strategy in there too that are quite useful whether you're new to the game or an old vet.
If I was going to buy only one book on baseball, I'm not sure it would be this one -- the Baseball Prospectus has a greater range of players (includes more minor leaguers) and the team comments are very interesting. If I was was going to buy one fantasy baseball book... it would probably be this one.
In any case, it's worth picking up.
Related Subjects: People Instruction History Sabermetrics Negro Leagues News and Media Directories Officiating Organizations Fan Pages Major League Minor League Amateur High School Youth Women College and University
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