Read up on the old ballgame
The boys of summer are back. The Angels are hot and the Dodgers
are.... well. But it’s that glorious time of year when the season
stretches out before us like the beckoning pure green of the diamond
and the field.
What is it about the sport of baseball that inspires writers to
such flights of fancy in so many books and magazines? Is it because
it’s called the thinking man’s game? Is it the years of tradition?
Whatever the reason, only golf begins to rival baseball in the number
of sports books published each year.
And what a wonderful selection of books there are for the baseball
fan: classics, new releases, profiles of games, teams, managers,
owners, players, commissioners, umpires, bat boys, ballparks,
uniforms, statistics, economics, quotations and humor, just for a
start. And we haven’t begun to think about the great fiction books
with baseball as their theme. Here are a few classics and newer books
that deserve the baseball fan’s attention as the new season
approaches.
“Baseball: A Literary Anthology” is the perfect place to start a
season of baseball reading. This terrific collection contains
everything from Thayer’s “Casey at the Bat” to Don DeLillo’s
electrifying prose description of the 1951 Dodgers-Giants playoff
game from his novel, “Underworld.” In between you will find everyone
from A. Bartlett Giamatti to Stephen King and from the Rogers --
Angell and Kahn -- to Jacques Barzun (remember “Whoever wants to know
the heart and mind of America had better learn baseball ... “? This
collection contains the whole essay).
George Gmelch and J.J. Weiner wrote a most unusual but fun and
insightful book called “In the Ballpark: The Working Lives of
Baseball People.” The closest one comes to reading about a ballplayer
is Bernie Williams’ wife. The rest of the people profiled sell the
peanuts, man the press box, groom the field, train the sore muscles
or dress up as the Phillie Phanatic.
No baseball fan could let go unread the collection of essays by
the late paleontologist Stephen Jay Gould, “Triumph and Tragedy in
Mudville: A Lifelong Passion for Baseball.” With his keen insight and
disarming humor, Gould’s topics range from Abner Doubleday to hitting
.400. It’s really enough of a summary to say that Gould was a
lifelong Yankee fan who held season tickets at Fenway Park.
If you prefer fiction to nonfiction, the library has the classics,
of course, like “The Natural,” “Shoeless Joe,” and “If I Never Get
Back.” But there are also a lot of little-known gems. Steve Kluger’s
“Last Days of Summer” consists solely of the hilarious correspondence
between a smart-alecky Jewish boy in Brooklyn during the World War II
and his idol, the all-star third baseman for the Giants. “The
Greatest Slump of All Time,” by David Carkeet, is an equally funny
and touching book about a winning club whose members all go into a
severe depression at the same time. Like all baseball books, it is a
metaphor, but also a great portrait of the inside workings of a team.
And lest we forget, there is local author Sherwood Kiraly’s
“California Rush” about a team of misfits, which culminates in the
funniest “big game” ever written.
Goodness, out of space and with so many more books to cover! We
haven’t even mentioned the great new baseball books due out in the
next few weeks like “27 Men Out: Baseball’s Perfect Games Through
History,” Tom Seaver’s “The Old Ballgame,” or “The Player: Christy
Mathewson, Baseball, and the American Century,” by Philip Seib. If
you are interested, just call or stop in at your local library for
these, and more, as the season begins.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Sara Barnicle. All titles may be
reserved from home or office computers by accessing the catalog at
https://www.newport beachlibrary.org. For more information on the
Central Library or any of the branch locations, please contact the
Newport Beach Public Library at (949) 717-3800, option 2.
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