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Cup of Coffee: The Very Short Careers of Eighteen Major League Pitchers

Cup of Coffee: The Very Short Careers of Eighteen Major League Pitchers

List Price: $18.00
Your Price: $12.60
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good Book that Could Have been Great
Review: 18 bittersweet tales of careers doomed by bad timing, bad luck and in some cases just plain bad play.

A welcome reminder that even those who play at sports highest levels are, at the end of the day, just plain Joes (and Janes).

The tales here are worthwhile and often touching (such as the pitcher who used his signing bonus to pay for running water for his family) but the author decided to serve merely as a court reporter providing near verbatim transcripts of the interviews. This makes the reader wade through unecessary pages of exhanges punctuated by "yes" and "no" answers. This slows the overall flow of the book to a snail's pace at times reducing impact and enjoyment of the book. In short, it's a subperb 200 page book that unfortunately goes on for 400+ pages.

The author/stenographer would have been well served to read and follow the example set by Lawrence Ritter in his classic "The Glory of Their Times" -- still the Gold Standard for baseball oral histories.

And what about the story of Larry Yount, the best "short career" story ever. Was introduced as pitcher(thereby registering officially as a player) pulled a muscle during his warm up pitches, was pulled before facing a batter and never made it back to the Bigs. Plus he was Robin Yount's brother. Now that's a story!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good read, despite...
Review: I enjoyed the book and I would highly recommend it to anyone who wants to read about the "average joe baseball player". However, the tense it was written in is positively annoying and makes it hard to read some of the time. Instead of writing how real people would talk, like, "So when you were in high school, what types of pitches were you throwing?" he writes, "You're in high school. What types of pitches are you now throwing?" It's written as if you're in a hypnotherapy session and you're regressing your memories.

Bottom line: Good book. Get a real editor.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good Book that Could Have been Great
Review: I enjoyed the book and I would highly recommend it to anyone who wants to read about the "average joe baseball player". However, the tense it was written in is positively annoying and makes it hard to read some of the time. Instead of writing how real people would talk, like, "So when you were in high school, what types of pitches were you throwing?" he writes, "You're in high school. What types of pitches are you now throwing?" It's written as if you're in a hypnotherapy session and you're regressing your memories.

Bottom line: Good book. Get a real editor.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good read, despite...
Review: I enjoyed the book and I would highly recommend it to anyone who wants to read about the "average joe baseball player". However, the tense it was written in is positively annoying and makes it hard to read some of the time. Instead of writing how real people would talk, like, "So when you were in high school, what types of pitches were you throwing?" he writes, "You're in high school. What types of pitches are you now throwing?" It's written as if you're in a hypnotherapy session and you're regressing your memories.

Bottom line: Good book. Get a real editor.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A must read!
Review: If you like stories about average people with big dreams, and you like baseball, this book is a perfect read. The book is written interview-style, and Rob Trucks asks the players questions that tell stories from the heart. There is a piece of inspiration in each story. I recommend this book to student athletes who are serious about their sports.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Once in a Lifetime Chance
Review: In a heartwarming way, Cup of Coffee looks at the human side of sports. The trials and triumphs of these players really put baseball in a whole new perspective.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Baseball Read
Review: Rob Trucks interview collection, Cup of Coffee, is an incisive look into the careers and lives of a group of major league pitchers who made it to the show just long enough to "have a cup of coffee". Trucks is a more than able interviewer. He seems to have done his homework on each player interviewed, so his questions pull out the stories he wants to get from them.

Interesting, informative, funny and often moving, Cup of Coffee is a worthy addition to the baseball fans' book collection.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great bedtime read
Review: Simply, I loved this book. I would read one bio each night before bed and found it (the individual bio) to be the perfect length, basically what Poe had in mind when he said a short story should be read in one sitting. I think readers make a mistake when they try to read this in one sitting. It should be read, in my opinion, more like a collection of short stories or a book of poetry, one ballplayer at time.

It's a lovely book, paced leisurely and calmly like the game it depicts. I mean, really, what's up with the reviewer who complains about the length. He's probably in favor of time limits on games and no extra innings too. This book, like the players and the subject it covers, should be read slowly, with the rhythms, the quiet passion and sudden moments of insight, that define America's game.

In sum, take your time and enjoy the ride. You'll be glad you did.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great bedtime read
Review: Simply, I loved this book. I would read one bio each night before bed and found it (the individual bio) to be the perfect length, basically what Poe had in mind when he said a short story should be read in one sitting. I think readers make a mistake when they try to read this in one sitting. It should be read, in my opinion, more like a collection of short stories or a book of poetry, one ballplayer at time.

It's a lovely book, paced leisurely and calmly like the game it depicts. I mean, really, what's up with the reviewer who complains about the length. He's probably in favor of time limits on games and no extra innings too. This book, like the players and the subject it covers, should be read slowly, with the rhythms, the quiet passion and sudden moments of insight, that define America's game.

In sum, take your time and enjoy the ride. You'll be glad you did.


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