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Baseball: A Literary Anthology

Baseball: A Literary Anthology

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $23.80
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: History as it Happened
Review: Baseball, in the time frame that it happened. This book is an excellent view of events in their time. It is a compilation of articles from writers, players, comentaters and owners. Although the book sometimes seems to jump around this can be expected when you are piecing together articles by so many different people. Where else could you find articles in the same book by Satchel Paige, Stephen King and A. Bartlett Giamatti. Baseball seems timeless and this book presents that. With first hand acounts of people and events that are long gone.

Of particular interest to me was the chapter where Lawrence Ritter talks to Sam Crawford. Sam's views on life and people are engrossing, his assessement of opposing players provocative and his memories of the game eye-opening.

Overall this book should be read by any fan of baseball. It's a unique book and is full (over 700 pages) of interesting reading. The entire history of baseball is covered in this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: History as it Happened
Review: Baseball, in the time frame that it happened. This book is an excellent view of events in their time. It is a compilation of articles from writers, players, comentaters and owners. Although the book sometimes seems to jump around this can be expected when you are piecing together articles by so many different people. Where else could you find articles in the same book by Satchel Paige, Stephen King and A. Bartlett Giamatti. Baseball seems timeless and this book presents that. With first hand acounts of people and events that are long gone.

Of particular interest to me was the chapter where Lawrence Ritter talks to Sam Crawford. Sam's views on life and people are engrossing, his assessement of opposing players provocative and his memories of the game eye-opening.

Overall this book should be read by any fan of baseball. It's a unique book and is full (over 700 pages) of interesting reading. The entire history of baseball is covered in this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is a truly great read!
Review: Baseball: A Literary Anthology edited by Nicholas Dawidoff and published by The Library of America offers a lively mix of stories, memoirs, poems, news reports, and insider accounts about all aspects of the great American game, from its pastoral nineteenth-century beginnings to its apotheosis as the undisputed national pastime.

Among the contributions are the works of Ring Lardner, Don DeLillo, sportswriters Damon Runyon & Red Smith, and poets William Carlos Williams & Yusef Komunyakaa. Included are essays and player profiles from John Updike, Gay Talese, Roger Angell, and David Remnick.

Baseball: A Literary Anthology is a varied and exuberant display of what baseball has meant to American writers. Among the highlights: Philip Roth considers the terrible thrill of the adolescent centerfielder; Richard Ford listens to minor league baseball on the radio while driving cross-country; Amiri Baraka remembers the joy of watching the Newark Eagles play Negro League ball; Stephen King follows his son's team on their riveting journey toward a Little League championship.

Bringing together tales of ambition and heartbreak, childlike wonder and implacable disappointment, raw strength and even rawer emotion, Baseball: A Literary Anthology tells a rich and vital story about the sport that has always been more than just a game in the hearts of Americans.

In an age where venal, shorsighted men seem bent on destroying the game, reading this book gives one perspective: Such men have always existed--and failed. This stands, then, as a book of remembrance, reflection and hope. It's just what baseball-and baseball fans-need.

This is a truly great read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "Play ball!"...and Cherish It
Review: In The Business of America, John Steele Gordon explains that, "Like all great team sports, baseball arose spontaneously from the human race's collective genius for play. Its ultimate origins lie in a game called rounders, played by village boys in England since time immemorial. Variations of rounders were known in both England and America by many other names, and one called baseball is even mentioned by Jane Austen in Northanger Abbey, written about 1798." Dawidoff has edited a literary anthology which, in my opinion, is the best single collection of writing about baseball as has yet been published. Even for long-time, passionate fans such as I, the fact many of the authors represented are unfamiliar adds even greater value to Dawidoff's 721-page anthology. That is to say, there are adventures of discovery in this superb collection...discoveries of voices perhaps not heard before as well as discoveries of situations previously unknown to most of us.

Appropriately, the first selection is Thayer's "Casey at the Bat." I never weary of reading it or of hearing someone recite it. Corny? Of course. I hasten to add, Dawidoff also includes brilliant commentaries by those sports journalists most closely identified with baseball (e.g. Runyon, Lardner, Rice, Smith, Gallico, and Angell) as well as Satchell Paige's delightful selection, "Rules for Staying Young." As I think about this book, the word "feast" comes to mind; also the word "buffet." The authors offer a wide and deep combination of perspectives on what remains our national pastime. Although I am appalled by so much which is apparently essential to Major League Baseball today (especially greed and the inevitable victim of it, loyalty), I have not as yet lost my faith in the game's essential integrity. I still get goose bumps when I emerge from a walkway and first see the lush green field. Later, the crack of a bat, the roar of a crowd in response. Hot dogs, cold beer, popcorn and peanuts (if not Cracker Jack). The uniquely thrilling excitement of an inside-the-park home run, a triple play, a steal of home. Years ago, a graduate school professor of mine suggested that a myth is something that never was and always will be. That is my view of baseball in its purest forms, a view encouraged by this remarkable book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tinker to Evers to Chance!
Review: The book provides a wonderful compliation of historical details and miniature biographies for each entry, an invaluable element of an anthology. Furthermore, the stories range from former baseball commissioners to newspaper journalists, from early interviews with old baseball players to a Gould analysis of statistics. It's all in here, including the oft-ignored verse of "Take Me Out to the Ball Game." A wonderful memento for any baseball fan, this book should attract the attention of 20th century American history buffs, journalists, and literature scholars. Baseball is the stuff of the 20th century, and this book gives you all of it, in context. Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Library of america shows its usual excellence
Review: The Library of america,which has been publishing its wonderful series for over 20 years, has now added this colllection{, edited by Nicholas dawidoff,author of The Catcher was a spy:A biography of Moe berg}. Baseball anthologies are present by the truckload.What seperates this volume is its sheer inclusiveness;from the usual suspects John Updike on Ted Williams,Ernest Lawrence Thayer's casey at The bat,Roger kahn on the Boys of Summer, Roger angell on the 1975 epic world series to the unknown James Weldon Johnson on mysterious pitching as a young man,Jimmy Breslin from his hilarious book on the 1962 Mets, Can't Anybody Here Play This Game?,to Stephen King's lovely Head Down,the great midwetern novelist J.F. Powers is represented here, as is Red Smith,Jerome Holtzman, Damon Runyon,paul Gallico and Nelson Algren. There is a great piece by Molly O'neill,the former NY Times food critic on her brother Paul[late of the yankees]. there is even poetry,appropriately for a litery collection:Franklin P Adams with the second most famous baseball poem,{after Casey at the Bat]Baseballs sad lexicon, William Carlos williams has 2 poems, the crowd at the ball game, and 4Th of July doubleheader,Pulitzer prize winner Yusef Komunyakaa checks in with Glory,as does martin Espada with rain delay,toledo mudhens,july 8,1994. From Richard ford to Phillip Roth, bart Giamatti to the great Murray Kempton,there is something here for all tastes[except stastistic fans,this is a literary anthology.] Very well done, with the usual Library of america sewn binding and acid free paper. Superb and Hugely recommended!!!!!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE baseball book
Review: This book is the book to have if you once played, have been a fan of, or have fallen in love with the greatest game known to man--baseball. Some of the authors here surprised me (especially DeLillo). These pieces form a noble, moving whole (kind of stitched together--like a baseball). As is usual, the book (being a Library of America special edition) is sturdily built--built to last. Get this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: America's Game
Review: This is a very nice collection of writing about baseball, nonfiction and fiction with a smattering of poetry by one of the classiest book publishers in America, the Library of America. There are already several collections of baseball writing, each with their hits and misses, but this is more hits than misses and a comprehensive theme of how baseball reflects in various ways on American life and character. From the famous baseball writers like Ring Lardner, Eric Rolfe Greenberg, and Mark Harris to the absolutely perfect passage from Underworld by Don DeLillo, this is a great book for anyone who loves baseball and appreciates good writing.

Note: I had originally given this four stars instead of five, only because W.P. Kinsella was not included. I have been given to understand that Kinsella is Canadian, so he doesn't properly belong in a collection of (United States of) American writing. My bad.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Buyer Beware!
Review: This is not the quality binding you would expect from Library of America! I have not yet read this book but I have my copy here in my hand. The binding appears to be glued, not sewn. The covers
are not cloth, but flimsy, slick cardboard. This is really a disappointing sight from the project which made its name with
sturdy cloth editions. This might still make a nice gift book, but it is not what I expected from this publisher.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perfect for the season, perfect for the off-season
Review: When Ted Williams died a few months ago, someone described "Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu," John Updike's chronicle of Williams' final game, as "the most perfect piece of sports writing ever." I looked for it in this collection, and there it was. When the baseball season ended last week (for us Mariners fans, anyway), another friend quoted Bart Giamatti's famous elegy that begins, "It breaks your heart. It is designed to break your heart." Like they say about the spaghetti sauce, "It's in there."

More than any other sport, I think, baseball seems to inspire writing that's lyrical without being cheesy or cloying. That much is apparent in this collection, which also treats us to "Casey at the Bat" (naturally), Owen Johnston, Ring Lardner, Nelson Algren, Jimmy Breslin, Roger Angell, and much more (but, I observe without comment, no George Will). When my lovely bride gave me this collection back in June, I knew it would be a perfect companion for the season. Now I'm finding it an even better companion for the still young off-season. So as we try to figure out how many days are left until pitchers and catchers report to spring training, this great collection of fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and prose will carry us forward, and back, to summer.


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