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I'm looking for a good baseball book to read. What's everyone's favorite baseball books? I'm interested in biographies (of individuals and teams), history, sabermetrics ect...

The last few books I've read have been:
a) Feeding The Monster
b) Game of Shadows
c) Moneyball (for the second time)
d) The Wrong Stuff by Bill "Spaceman" Lee
e) My Turn at Bat by Ted Williams (for the third time!)
...and Bill James' "Historical Baseball Abstract" is always on my nightstand.
Does anyone have suggestions? I'm considering "The Big Bam, the life and times of Babe Ruth" by Leigh Montville, or Jose Canseco's "Juiced". I know you folks have some great books on your shelves, let's hear 'em!
Creative Thought Matters
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quote:
Originally posted by PopTime:
While we're on the subject of baseball and the media, I'm looking for a good baseball book to read. What's everyone's favorite baseball books? I'm interested in biographies (of individuals and teams), history, sabermetrics ect...

The last few books I've read have been:
a) Feeding The Monster
b) Game of Shadows
c) Moneyball (for the second time)
d) The Wrong Stuff by Bill "Spaceman" Lee
e) My Turn at Bat by Ted Williams (for the third time!)
...and Bill James' "Historical Baseball Abstract" is always on my nightstand.
Smile

This is probably better suited for its own topic, but I'll bite anyway. Just following your lead, Pop Time. I enjoyed Keith Hernandez's Pure Baseball when I read it years ago.

Here's a review from Amazon.

As a baseball fan who's trying to get a little more knowledgeable about the game, this book was excellent. This book goes into pages and pages of details and opinions about the minute details of baseball. I already knew the basic principles behind the hit and run and whatnot, but this book allows itself six or seven page tangents, explaining the vagaries of such subjects in far great detail than I could have. The device of doing so through two baseball games was well-concieved, showing not just the strategy behind techniques, but what the fan watching the game should look for when watching a game. Both games were close, and there was some of the same sense of anticipation, wondering who would win, as attending a baseball game.

Be aware that this book was very technical. While I will definitely lend this book to my brother, who wants to become a sports announcer, I was hoping this might be a primer to baseball strategies for my girlfriend. However, it would obviously be over the head of anybody who can't talk baseball already, or is willing to closely study the book.

My only real complaint is that Hernandez quite often predicts strategies, and then watches the manager do something entirely different. I appreciate the honesty, but instead of speculating, re-explaining himself, or better yet calling up Sparky Anderson after the game, he leaves it at "who can tell?" Still an excellent book, I'd recommend it to anybody who wants to expand their knowledge of baseball.


It pretty much sums up my recollection of the book, sans the GF part.

...and your reply

Done. As far as your recommendation, like the review states, a little too technical. Though I did like Jerry Remy's "Watching Baseball", which was written in the same vein.

Creative Thought Matters
Last edited by Pop Fly
“The Head Game – Baseball Seen From The Pitcher’s Mound” by Roger Kahn; This is a great history about pitching history from Ol’ Hoss Radbourn, who pitched over 600 innings and won 60 games in one season, to Cy Young, Christy Matthewson, Warren Spann, and Bob Gibson. He goes into the development of different pitches and evolution of relief pitching and the bullpen. You’ll learn a lot about the game from this book.

Kahn wrote “The Boys of Summer” which isn’t a bad read.

“Baseball Shorts – 1,000 of the Game’s Funniest One-Liners” by Glenn Liebman: Great book for the quick read.

As well as……

“Echoes from the Ballpark” by Alan Ross

“As Koufax Said… The 400 Best Things Ever Said About How To Play Baseball” (compiled) by Randy Voorhees and Mark Gola
“Perfect I’m Not” (David Wells autobiography)
Love him or hate him this is a very entertaining read. Good insight on the game and its personalities and life in the game of baseball, from a real character.


“Minor Players, Major Dreams” by Brett Mandel
An excellent look at minor league baseball life.

Amazon review excerpt:
Former high school ballplayer Brett Mandel yearned to experience a year in the minor leagues, so he convinced the Ogden (Utah) Raptors, about to embark on their maiden season, to let him chronicle that season from the perspective of a uniformed player. They agreed. The resulting saga describes the long bus rides, the bad food, the frustrations, and hopes that are all a part of baseball dreaming with affectionate good humor. The book's true life, though, steps up in the poignancy with which Mandel draws his teammates, young men destined for the most part to fall short of their great desire.


"The Teammates: A Portrait of Friendship" by David Halberstam

This was a touching, enjoyable book to read.

from Amazon:
As baseball legend Ted Williams lay dying in Florida, his old Boston Red Sox teammates Johnny Pesky and Dom DiMaggio piled into a car and drove 1,300 miles to see their friend. Another member of the close-knit group, Bobby Doerr, remained in Oregon to tend to his wife who had suffered a stroke. Besides providing a poignant travelogue of the elderly Pesky and DiMaggio's trip, David Halberstam's The Teammates goes back in time to profile the men as young ballplayers. Although it is enlightening to learn about Doerr, Pesky, and DiMaggio, the leader of the group and star of the book is Williams. Halberstam portrays the notoriously moody and difficult Williams as a complex man: driven by a rough childhood and a fiercely competitive nature to become perhaps the greatest pure hitter of all time while also being a magnetic personality and loving friend. While there is nothing exceptionally unusual about old men who have stayed friends (plenty of people stay friends, after all), baseball gives this particular relationship a unique makeup. Unlike most friendships, that of Williams, Doerr, Pesky, and DiMaggio was viewed all summer long by hooting, hollering Red Sox fans. As such, their bond is forged both of individual accomplishment, win-loss records, numerous road trips, and, since they played for the Red Sox, annual doses of disappointment.
I like all of Halberstam's books.

Three Nights in August by Buzz Bissinger was a great look into Tony LaRussa's mind, baseball strategy in general and some baseball history.

Dan Shaugnessy's Senior Year is fun, especially if you just finished your son's senior year and he played in Massachusetts. You may recognize some of the names and places.

The Mickey Mantle Novel is quite raunchy, and I'm not sure how factual it is, but it was fun.

I just started "The Soul of Baseball: A Trip Through Buck O'Neil's America" So far it is great.
For sabermetric stuff, I would recommend the following:

The Numbers Game
Moneyball
Baseball Between The Numbers (my favorite)
Baseball Prospectus Annual
Baseball Forecaster Annual
Mind Game
Historical Baseball Abstract

I also like "Built To Win" and "Scouts Honor". It kind of goes against the Moneyball philosophy and details how the Braves built their teams through the scouting process, etc.

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