Home :: Books :: Sports  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports

Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Red Smith on Baseball

Red Smith on Baseball

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good for a baseball fan from any generation
Review: Even though most of these collected columns are from over 30 years ago, they are not at all dated. You may not know the names, you may not have even been born when the events happened. But Red Smith's writing is so interesting, free of cliches, and downright enjoyable that even a casual reader will be drawn into Smith's columns. One of my favorites is Smith's account of the 1970 All-Star Game, Richard Nixon, and Morganna, a well-endowed stripper famous for running onto baseball fields and kissing ballplayers such as Pete Rose and Clete Boyer. Read it! It's great!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A baseball treasure
Review: Except for Ken Smith's National Baseball Hall of Fame (1947), this work rates at the top of the baseball list. It is so good that I have given copies to the various Frick & Spink awardees with whom I have corresponded.

Best described as shorties: selected daily writings by the dean of baseball writers. Get to know the players as they really existed, not as today's fables want you to believe.

You can't go wrong here.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good writing should get better book production
Review: If you are a fan of baseball and of good writing, then you already have this book. If for some reason it's escaped your attention, it's the perfect antidote for post-World Series withdrawal. There is no need to repeat all the good things said about this man as a writer, so I'll limit myself to a few observations. The choice of columns documents Red's contributions to the cults of Dimaggio and Stengel. There are also several columns about the last game of a WS, and it's interesting to see how much space he used in short columns to come up with new descriptions of the pile-up on the mound after the last pitch. Finally, two quibbles: this book was not proof-read, it was spell-checked. That's a disgrace to a writer as careful as Red. And the cover photo appears to be Dodger Stadium, which, considering the columns inside the book about Walter O'Malley's abandonment of Brooklyn, is ironic to put it mildly. These are just irritations, though. Overall, this is a must-have in a baseball collection.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: none better
Review: Now it is done. Now the story ends. And there is no way to tell it. The art of fiction is dead. Reality has strangled invention. Only the utterly
impossible, the inexpressibly fantastic, can ever be plausible again.
-Last Chapter (October 4, 1951)

That is perhaps the most famous opening of any column in the history of journalism, and deservedly so. In fact, as you read this extraordinarily fine
collection of Red Smith's baseball writings, it is remarkable to realize just how many of his lines and phrases you recognize. Of course, when Smith
was a sportswriter, the sports page often contained the best writing in the paper. Today our image of journalists is absurdly inflated by Watergate and
the generation it inspired, but watch a movie from the '30s or 40s (say The Front Page) and you'll see just how low was the esteem they were held in.
But the sports guys had plum jobs so the position attracted truly talented men, from Damon Runyan to Ring Lardner to Paul Gallico to Smith himself.

Through some happy confluence of the stars Smith wrote for The New York Herald Tribune during the period when New York City not only had
three baseball teams but three very good baseball Writing on deadline teams : the 1940s and 50s versions of the Yankees; Dodgers; and Giants. This
book, though it covers other decades too, draws heavily from this period, which has not suffered from inattention over the years, but it is Smith's
descriptions of what happened (as with the opening line above) that remain in our minds. Here's another of my favorites, written on October 4, 1947,
after Cookie Lavagetto and the Dodgers had broken up a Floyd Bevens no-hitter to beat the Yankees and win the World Series :

The unhappiest man in Brooklyn is sitting up here in the far end of the press box. The 'V' on his typewriter is broken. He can't write either
Lavagetto or Bevens.

Even writing on a daily deadline, Smith managed to toss off great lines like that in nearly every column. There are links to a fair sampling of his
pieces below and the book is most highly recommended.

GRADE : A+

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Still hitting home runs
Review: Red Smith never was much of a singles hitter. This collection of columns that span nearly four decades go deep with a wonderful blend of humor and insight. While the majority of columns are New York-based, there are enough bon mots about the greats and not-so-greats of the game to keep any baseball fan happy. One wishes that Smith were alive today to comment on today's game. He writes about Jackie Robinson's passion, Stachell Paige's humor, Bowie Kuhn's lack of it and more. For those of you who might need a good baseball writing fix this summer, you need not go any farther than this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: nice collection of Smith columns
Review: Red Smith was one of New York's premier baseball writers. His career spanned the period from 1941 to 1981. He was in his prime in the 1950s and 1960s when I was a avid baseball (Yankee) fan and I read all the sports columns particularly those in the New York Times or the Herald Tribune. The very first column about Mickey Owen's dropping Heinrich's third strike is a gem and a great choice to start out with. The articles are in a chronological order by decades. While there is some coverage of the 1970s and 1980s over half the book covers articles from the 40s and 50s and well over two thirds of it covers through the 60s. He likes to quote Casey Stengel who had many gems to include.

This is great for Yankee fans as brings back memories of the teams of the 50s and the way they were managed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: nice collection of Smith columns
Review: Red Smith was one of New York's premier baseball writers. His career spanned the period from 1941 to 1981. He was in his prime in the 1950s and 1960s when I was a avid baseball (Yankee) fan and I read all the sports columns particularly those in the New York Times or the Herald Tribune. The very first column about Mickey Owen's dropping Heinrich's third strike is a gem and a great choice to start out with. The articles are in a chronological order by decades. While there is some coverage of the 1970s and 1980s over half the book covers articles from the 40s and 50s and well over two thirds of it covers through the 60s. He likes to quote Casey Stengel who had many gems to include.

This is great for Yankee fans as brings back memories of the teams of the 50s and the way they were managed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An involving, lively baseball history.
Review: Smith is one of the finest baseball writers in history and this gathers over a hundred of his more memorable columns from 1941-81, capturing the best moments of his reports of key players and games. An involving, lively coverage results.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: None Better
Review: The subtitle indicates for whom this book will have the greatest appeal: "The Game's Greatest Writer on the Game's Greatest Years." Included are 167 of Smith's best columns (written during the years 1941-1981) which were syndicated in almost 300 newspapers throughout the United States. How good was Smith? In the Foreword, Ira Berkow notes that a "blue-ribbon panel" was commissioned to select the 25 most influential newspaper people of the Twentieth Century. The final list included numerous publishers (eg Pulitzer, Ochs, and Graham) and writers (eg Mencken, Lippmann, and Pyle) but only one sportswriter: Red Smith. I thoroughly reading every single column and especially appreciated Smith's comments on Hall of Famers, of course, but also on dozens of others who had but one brief moment of glory. For example, Floyd ("Bill") Bevens, Al Gionfriddo, and Cookie Lavagetto. For those who share my passion for what was once the "national pastime", Smith was more than a great baseball writer or (as the blue-ribbon panel concluded) a great writer, period. He was also an anthropologist who examined a unique culture with style and grace as well as precision. Also with delicious wit. I would love to share Smith's thoughts about Major League Baseball today. Alas, that is a book he cannot write...and a book no one else could write better than he. Period.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: They don't write columns like this anymore
Review: This is a collection of columns by Red Smith, one of the greatest sports reporters who ever lived. He wrote in an unusual style, telling a story in his colorful way, rather than reporting the highlights of the game and throwing in some quotes from the players. You need to pay closer attention to his columns than to the average sports story you'll see in a newspaper today, but you'll not only find out what happened the previous day, you'll also be entertained by his writing.

I've been a huge fan of Red Smith's ever since I heard his classic line about the horrible Packers team that finished a season with one win, ten losses and a tie. He wrote that they overwhelmed one team, underwhelmed 10 and whelmed one. If you got a kick out of that line, you'll enjoy this collection of baseball columns.

It also gives you a good glimpse of New York baseball in the 40's and 50's.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates