Yankee Miracles: Life With the Boss and the Bronx Bombers
November 10, 2012 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
When my buddy Joe Favorito asked for my address because he had something he wanted to send me, I gladly forwarded it to him not knowing what to expect, but figuring it would be worth my while. The package arrived and when I opened it I couldn’t believe my eyes; there in front of me […]
Baseball State by State, A Review
August 22, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
There are many fine baseball resource books to keep close at hand and Chris Jensen has added another. My favorite is Paul Dickson’s Baseball Dictionary, but Chris Jensen’s Baseball State by State may have more practical value, even if it lacks Dickson’s wonderful illustrations. The strength of the aggregation is two-fold. While there is no […]
The Yankee Way: A Review of Pinstripe Empire
August 15, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
As a Red Sox fan I thought I had heard it all when it came to the glory of the New York Yankees and their 27 World Series titles. It’s a refrain frequently presented in a matter of fact tone to anyone with the audacity to challenge the place of the Yankees at the top […]
Jury Is Out On John Grisham’s Baseball Novel
June 25, 2012 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
“At long last,” it says on the back cover of John Grisham’s new novel,Calico Joe, “America’s favorite storyteller takes on America’s favorite pastime.” Calico Joe is a good story, smoothly and movingly told, although after page 19 I was able to predict most of what would happen the rest of the way. A bigger tipoff appears one […]
Reviewing The Baseball Hall of Shame: The Best of Blooperstown
June 13, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Let’s face it; for many of us baseball fans the game is not always about who won or lost. It’s about the story and the journey of our favorite teams and players, which are comprised of plays; the unusual, the good, the bad, and the ugly. Perhaps more than any other sport baseball has a […]
“A Unique Look At Big League Baseball” A Must Have For Seamheads
May 21, 2012 by Mike Lynch · 6 Comments
The following was originally posted in early January but Joe’s book is so good, I decided to post it again. For most normal people, New Year’s Eve is all about bidding the old year adieu and ringing in the new one with friends, family, Dick Clark, Times Square, Jenny McCarthy kissing a dude she’d just […]
Driving Mr. Yogi
May 5, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
In the recently released book, Driving Mr. Yogi by Harvey Araton, the front seat is occupied ably by Yogi Berra and Ron Guidry, but the back seat is filled with the Pantheon of modern day Yankee heroes. Characteristically, George Steibrenner spills over into the front and tries to take the wheel. But Yogi Berra is too much […]
Book Review: 60’6″
May 4, 2012 by James Forr · Leave a Comment
60’6″: Balls, Strikes, and Baseball Mortality, the debut novel from former college and semipro pitcher Mike Arsenault, is a portrait of a young man clinging to an impossible dream and wondering what lies beyond. Arsenault uses baseball as his backdrop, but his story transcends the […]
Banzai Babe Ruth: A Review
May 4, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
No matter how popular the NFL or NBA becomes, baseball still holds the title of America’s pastime. For over a century it has been seen as a way to connect Americans with fellow countrymen and those from abroad, but is that a true representation? Baseball has also served as a backdrop to larger diplomatic and […]
A People’s History of Baseball: A Review
April 2, 2012 by Andrew Martin · 2 Comments
Baseball is steeped in the notion of myth and the existence of a narrative declaring the game to be a bastion of good and American wholesomeness. Such contrivances interfere with the study of history, making it difficult to find works associated with baseball that are able to push through such obstacles. With the publishing of […]
Changed Forever
March 20, 2012 by Ted Leavengood · 1 Comment
In 1968 baseball’s golden era did not go gently into that good night of historical lore and remembrance. It went out with the bang of Bob Gibson and Mickey Lolich fighting it out in one of the great pitching duels ever, one that played out in the final game game of the ’68 World Series. […]
A Pilgrimage To the Past
March 12, 2012 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
Baseball is all about connections. Players make connections with teammates that extend beyond the playing field and beyond their careers. Management links combinations of people whose connections strengthen the collective effort. As fans, we connect with teams, players, and events, and each of us accumulates a rich fabric of memories, favorites, and unfulfilled wishes. Every […]
“Out Of My League: A Rookie’s Survival In The Bigs”
February 27, 2012 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
I first met Dirk Hayhurst after The Bullpen Gospels had already been a hit on the New York Times best-seller list. In fact, that’s why I reached out to him—he was a big league pitcher who also had the ability to write, two things I admire and respect. I found Dirk to be engaging, open […]
“Long Taters” Goes Deep
February 27, 2012 by Mike Lynch · 2 Comments
I first met Ron Anderson via email three years ago when he replied to a post I made about my search for contributors to Seamheads.com. Ron and I struck up a friendship and I was thrilled to learn he was in the early stages of a book about one of my all-time favorite players—George “Boomer” […]
Good Show, Mr. Bailey
February 20, 2012 by Jeff Polman · 1 Comment
Back in the good old disco ’70s, I had the thrill of working a New England amusement park roller coaster for three consecutive summers. It was me and four other impressionable, party-loving young guys and the pay was crap, but we had so many vivid, unforgettable moments I can still feel the sensation of stopping […]
Fenway 1912: Glenn Stout’s Fascinating History of Fenway Park and the 1912 Red Sox
January 22, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Fenway Park is one of the most historic and well known landmarks in all of baseball and Boston. Despite its modern notoriety, the home of the Red Sox is the oldest major league stadium still in play, and is about to celebrate its 100th anniversary later this spring. Professional sport venues typically have lives that […]
A Book as “Terrific” as Its Subject
January 19, 2012 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Like the “The Little Engine that Could,” Tom Seaver began a steep climb saying “I think I can. I think I can.” Seaver’s mom, Betty, grafted the story into her son’s DNA by reading it to him as a child. Seaver always thought he could do whatever he set out to do, and usually he […]
A Real Dandy
December 15, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Juan Marichal won more games than anyone in the 1960s. That’s some accomplishment for the “Dominican Dandy” who began playing ball using branches for bats and socks wrapped around golf balls for baseballs. “We just loved the game so much that, as a kid, anywhere you saw other kids playing, you wanted to be there,” […]
Celebrating Mets History Anyway
December 11, 2011 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
Last week was a tough one for Mets fans as Jose Reyes has done what most New Yorkers can’t manage until they’re twice his age–he took the money and fled to Florida. The team might be in for the Second Dark Ages the next few years, reminiscent of the forgettable seasons between the departure of […]
Starting Something Great
December 1, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
When the Red Sox assembled their dream roster last offseason, many wrote them into the World Series without hesitation. We still don’t understand all that went wrong, but what we do know is that the “greatest team ever” label was not to be. Author Thomas J. Whalen argues that even the 2004 title winner did […]
In an Instant
November 17, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
What if you were known for one thing most of your life? What if that one thing was not favorable? That’s the story Ralph Branca tells in “A Moment in Time” with David Ritz. Read this book because: 1. Good or bad, baseball is one of life’s few constants. (Well, almost.) There’s nothing like the […]
Simple Pleasures
November 10, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
With Thanksgiving almost upon us, what better time to “take time for paradise”? That’s the name of Bart Giamatti’s classic book from 1989. It was re-released earlier this year. If you are fond of nostalgia, take a look back at what the former baseball commissioner had to say. Read this book because: 1. It is […]
The Art of Fielding, by Chad Harbach
October 2, 2011 by Ted Leavengood · Leave a Comment
After finishing Chad Harbach’s fine baseball novel, The Art of Fielding, on Friday night, I could not help seeing Joe Maddon astride the bow of his whaler, with Evan Longoria and the lads manning the oars behind him as their captain sinks his harpoon into the great white, pin-striped leviathan. The book stews its baseball slowly […]
A Book To Be Savored
September 24, 2011 by Gabriel Schechter · Leave a Comment
There seems to be no debate in baseball history circles about the identity of the game’s greatest photographer: Charles Conlon. If/when the Hall of Fame stops dithering and institutes an annual award for baseball photography, it will be named after Conlon. With good reason: the New York-based Conlon took thousands of photos from 1905-1942, capturing […]
Consummate Captain
September 8, 2011 by Sam Miller · 2 Comments
If Sandy Koufax is in the Baseball Hall of Fame, why not Don Mattingly? OK, OK, maybe that’s like comparing apples to oranges. How about Kirby Puckett vs. Don Mattingly? Take a look at this and more in “Donnie Baseball” by longtime journalist Mike Shalin. Read this book because: 1. Nobody worked harder than Mattingly. […]
“Pop” Paved the Way
September 1, 2011 by Sam Miller · 2 Comments
If I were to ask you who were the best black baseball players, Satchel Paige, Josh Gibson and Oscar Charleston might readily come to mind. Chances are it would take you awhile to think of John Henry “Pop” Lloyd. You might never get there. In that case the list would be sorely lacking. Better pick […]
Here’s a Knuckle Sandwich
August 25, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
With his next win, Tim Wakefield will earn the 200th victory of his career. What better time to read “Knuckler: My Life with Baseball’s Most Confounding Pitch” by Tim Wakefield with Tony Massarotti? Read this book because: 1. Wakefield shares with you what few others know – how to throw the knuckleball. One umpire describes […]
Rickey was Right On
August 4, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
In teaming with Jackie Robinson to break the color barrier, Branch Rickey helped make Barack Obama’s presidency possible. That’s one reason why Jimmy Breslin decided to write a biography on Rickey. One could surmise Rickey’s decision to team with Robinson was about morality. After all, he broke the news in a pulpit. In truth, this was […]
You Can Bank on It
July 28, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
In 1967, Louis Armstrong recorded “What a Wonderful World.” Do you think Armstrong naturally believed that about everything? Most likely not, but he made a decision to view life with optimism. While Armstrong dazzled the jazz circuit, Ernie Banks shared a similar view on the baseball diamond. “Let’s play two,” Banks said. A combination of […]
Hunter or Hunted?
July 7, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Long before Pete Rose, there was Hal Chase. In “The Black Prince of Baseball: Hal Chase and the Mythology of the Game,” authors Donald Dewey and Nicholas Acocella examine whether Chase left an indelible black mark on baseball or whether the culture of baseball scourged Hal Chase. Read this book because: 1. Chase was one […]
Overbearing, Ostentatious and Odd
June 30, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Overbearing, ostentatious, odd. All three words could describe the way Charlie O. Finley operated. You won’t want to miss this week’s read, “Charlie Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball’s Super Showman” by G. Michael Green and Roger D. Lanius. Read this book because: 1. Charlie Finley did some good. Up until the end of his […]
“Nobody’s Perfect”
June 23, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Just one step away. One break. We all know the feeling. What separates us is what we do when the moment comes and what we have learned to prepare us. That’s what this week’s read, “Nobody’s Perfect,” is about. The “almost-perfect game” is merely part of the story. Read Armando Galarraga and Jim Joyce’s story […]
Double No-No Equals Yes
June 9, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
As a high school pitcher growing up in small-town New Jersey, Johnny Vander Meer drew plenty of attention. Watching one of the young man’s starts, you never knew what you might see. “They never made a hit off me,” Vander Meer said. “They couldn’t. I walked them all. I could throw hard in those days, […]
Forerunner Foster
June 2, 2011 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Long before Muhammad Ali asserted that he was the greatest, Rube Foster staked that claim for himself and his teams. Foster, author Robert Charles Cottrell says, could be considered more influential than Jackie Robinson. Read “The Best Pitcher in Baseball: The Life of Rube Foster, Negro League Giant” because: 1. Foster consistently put the best […]
Bill James, Crime Writer
May 31, 2011 by Jeff Polman · 1 Comment
I have a confession to make. Every time I walk into a bookstore the first two sections I visit are Baseball and True Crime. You would think no two subjects would be further apart, and yet they do have an odd symmetry. Both are treasure troves of curious tales with colorful characters. Both create an […]