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Play by Play : Baseball, Radio, and Life in the Last Chance League

Play by Play : Baseball, Radio, and Life in the Last Chance League

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $12.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A fine story about people and also baseball
Review: I can only conclude that some folks have tossed this aside and tapped out their negative reviews without really reading it. First of all, there is nothing about any Vietnam experience here. Conan briefly describes his experience in *IRAQ* in 1991, which informs the picture of Conan's relationship with his job and family, which in turn has a direct bearing on the story of his leaving his job and family (temporarily) to be radio guy for the Aberdeen Arsenal baseball team. The Iraq experience, furthermore, is inserted at the point in the narrative when the baseball guys were asking Conan to tell *them* about it.
I thought the book was a great portrait of Conan's season and the various characters he encountered, and a pleasant addition to the too-small shelf of literature of independent-league baseball.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Could have been better.
Review: I enjoyed Neal Conan's book because he succeeded at doing something I always wanted to do. I've been in radio since I was sixteen, and I've been in love with baseball from an even earlier age, but I have never been able to combine my two loves. Neal Conan followed through on his dream -- on my dream -- if only for one season, and I thank him for the vicarious pleasure.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Pursuit Of A Dream
Review: Neal Conan is really telling two stories here...one is about his season as play-by-play announcer for the Albany Arsenal, the other is about his own mid-life crisis that led him to take a leave from his job at National Public Radio to spend a season as that team's play-by-play announcer.

The author introduces us to the manager of the team (major league veteran Darrell Evans) and to the players, none of whom are familiar at the beginning of the tale. That's because independent leagues are dependent on those young men who got sidetracked on the way to The Show...whether there was a flaw in their game or in their personality, they had been tossed aside by the big league organizations, and were out to make the most of one final chance with this independent club.

We follow Conan through his shaky start at the beginning of the season, which mirrors the difficult start the team experiences; while Conan steadily gains confidence and skill, it's much more of an up-and-down experience for the Arsenal. This is a thoughtful, sometimes funny, sometimes sad, very human story. I truly enjoyed reliving the year with Conan, and hope you will, too.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: good stuff
Review: Neal Conan, longtime National Public Radio host/correspondent/producer, has offered up a fine volume on the subject of his sabbatical year as play-by-play announcer for a minor league baseball team. With baseball - and its labor disputes, nascent drug scandals, and rapidly tarnishing image as the American Game - much in the news these days, the fit is a most appropriate one. And he delivers the goods. Minor League ball is currently all the rage, and this book gives you the background and personal stories which fill in a complete picture of a fascinating world most of us know only from the grandstands. His writing flows nicely, his story is compelling, and his team...well, you'll just have to read it and find out what happens to the Aberdeen Arsenal during the course of this singular season. Let's just say that it's good Conan had a job waiting for him back at NPR. Can't wait to hear what his next book is going to be about.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: good stuff
Review: The premise of this book is delightful - baseball fan becomes play-by-play announcer. It was, in fact, the reason I bought the book. The book itself starts slowly and gets worse, finally bogging down in the author's Vietnam experience. I got the feeling it was heavily padded.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I listened!
Review: The truth is, I haven't read the book yet (though I am ordering it now). But I was a listener and loyal fan and the 5 star rating refers to his broadcasting ability. The community college radio station that broadcast his . . . uh, broadcasts, was so local that not everyone in Harford County, Maryland, could get it (and, in fact, I stopped going to games because I could hear him better at home than on my earbuds & portable!). The Baltimore baseball market has had some terrific broadcasters over the years, so the standards by which I judge are high indeed. What I loved best was how he handled the quirks that occured in a decidedly unprofessional ballpark, sitting in a portable trailer with barely a view of the entire field. And suffice it to say that no other broadcaster has ever sent me running for the dictionary to make sure I really understood his call. The Aberdeen Arsenal lasted just that one season, but the Ripkin Brothers (Cal and Billy) are opening a first-class minor league park and baseball academy in Aberdeen this summer. Neal, any chance you can come back to call a game or two??


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