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Any Recommendations for Baseball Non-Fiction?

I am looking to purchase another non-fiction baseball book and am curious as to what you guys would recommend. I am currently reading Roger Kahn's The Boys of Summer and really enjoy reading about players from the 1950's and before, especially about players from the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Cardinals. I will consider anything. Thanks for any ideas.

Chris
Chris
My small collection
Want List:
'61 Topps Roy Campanella in PSA 5-7
Cardinal T206 cards
Adam Wainwright GU Jersey

Comments

  • itzagoneritzagoner Posts: 8,753 ✭✭
    read Jim Brosnans' The Long Season
  • The Glory of Their Times by Lawrence Ritter
    image
  • MeteoriteGuyMeteoriteGuy Posts: 7,140 ✭✭
    Not Brooklyn, but the Mickey Mantle book , "The Mick" is a great read, and you can likely pick up a copy fairly cheap, via amazon or like, as it was mass produced.

    Mark
    Collecting PSA graded Steve Young, Marcus Allen, Bret Saberhagen and 1980s Topps Cards.
    Raw: Tony Gonzalez (low #'d cards, and especially 1/1's) and Steve Young.
  • WondoWondo Posts: 2,916 ✭✭✭
    I always loved Leo Durocher's bio "Nice Guys Finish Last." Good stuff.image
    Wondo

  • jskirwinjskirwin Posts: 700 ✭✭✭
    The Spirit of St. Louis

    Covers Browns as well as Cardinals from their founding onward.
  • FavreFan1971FavreFan1971 Posts: 3,103 ✭✭✭
    I personally lover Catcher in the Wry by Bob Uecker.
  • " The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading and Bubble Gum Book" by Boyd and Harris. Funny stuff with great pictures and comments about older cards.


    Rich
  • ajwajw Posts: 2,281 ✭✭✭
    The Glory of their Times is a must read.
    Veeck as in Wreck and Lords of the Realm are my two all-time favorite baseball books, though.
  • DerekDDerekD Posts: 388 ✭✭
    Crazy '08 by Cait Murphy. Covers the 1908 season in very interesting detail. The Glory of Their Times is also a good read.

    DD
  • scooter729scooter729 Posts: 1,730 ✭✭✭
    Fitting your specific preference, I just started "Opening Day" by Jonathan Eig. It profiles the 1947 Brooklyn Dodgers and Jackie Robinson's first season. Good book so far, though I'm only 30 pages into it now.
  • "Just play ball" by Joe Garagiola. Easy read very intersting and funny.
  • Goodsport40Goodsport40 Posts: 1,010 ✭✭
    Lords of the Realm is a great one. Also, Eight Men Out is a good read even if you have seen the movie.

    Robert
  • GootGoot Posts: 3,496
    Black and Blue but I forget who it was written by. It's about the 1966 Orioles.
  • ArnyVeeArnyVee Posts: 4,245 ✭✭
    Another vote for Glory of their Times....great book.
    * '72 BASEBALL #15 100%
    * C. PASCUAL BASIC #3
    * T. PEREZ BASIC #4 100%
    * L. TIANT BASIC #1
    * DRYSDALE BASIC #4 100%
    * MAGIC MASTER #4/BASIC #3
    * PALMEIRO MASTER/BASIC #1
    * '65 DISNEYLAND #2
    * '78 ELVIS PRESLEY #6
    * '78 THREE'S COMPANY #1

    image

    WaltDisneyBoards
  • TNP777TNP777 Posts: 5,710 ✭✭✭
    The Catcher Was A Spy - The Moe Berg Story
  • sagardsagard Posts: 1,901 ✭✭✭
    The Umpire Strikes Back by Ron Luciano is pretty damn funny.
  • MooseDogMooseDog Posts: 1,948 ✭✭✭
    You are already reading one of the great ones in the Boys of Summer. As already mentioned, Glory of their Times is a must read, as is the Great American Flipping, Trading, etc...if you can find it.

    Some of the older books are well worth reading. Some I would highly recommend...in no particular order.

    1) Baseball Is a Very Funny Game by Joe Garagiola
    2) This Great Game (don't remember author)
    3) Ball Four by Jim Bouton (this was the first book to blow the lid off the "what goes on in the clubhouse, stays in the clubhouse" rule)
    4) Moneyball by Michael Lewis
    5) Veeck as in Wreck by Bill Veeck
    6) Only The Ball Was White by Robert Peterson (still the best book on Negro League history)

    If you want a breezy fiction look for the novelization of THE CURIOUS CASE OF SIDD FINCH by George Plimpton. He expands his legendary SI story into a full novel and I found it very enjoyable.
  • Tedw9Tedw9 Posts: 1,424 ✭✭
    Last summer I read a great book called "Say It Ain't So Joe" about Shoeless Joe Jackson and the Black Sox scandal. Great book with lots of very interesting facts about the World Series and Joes involvement.

    Another book I would recommend is "The Short Stop" by Zane Grey. Good story and a real good feel of how things were back in the early 1900's. This book is a work of fiction but still a good read.
    Looking for Carl Willey items.
  • cwazzycwazzy Posts: 3,257
    Thanks for all of the suggestions. I will have to pick most of these up eventually.

    Chris
    Chris
    My small collection
    Want List:
    '61 Topps Roy Campanella in PSA 5-7
    Cardinal T206 cards
    Adam Wainwright GU Jersey
  • Good Enough to Dream by Roger Kahn.

    He spends a summer with the Utica, NY Blue Sox. Book was written in the mid 80's about the 83 Utica team.

    Read the book 10 or so years ago. I seem to remember I enjoyed the book. Had to look up the title on Google.
    "Im not young enough to know everything."
    Oscar Wilde

    Collect for the love of the hobby, the beauty of the coins, and enjoy the ride.

    Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society.
  • ajwajw Posts: 2,281 ✭✭✭
    ESPN columnist Rob Neyer has a *great* reading list. It's several years old, but you can't go wrong with this one. Robert Creamer's book Babe is first on the list, and it really is a great read. I'd highly recommend it.

    Here is Neyer's List.
  • rbdjr1rbdjr1 Posts: 4,474 ✭✭

    "The Echoing Green" by Joshua Prager
    A definitive look back at what many regard as the most dramatic moment in baseball history—Bobby Thomson's ninth-inning home run that won the '51 pennant for the comeback New York Giants over the archrival Brooklyn Dodgers. Recent revelations have also made it one of the most intriguing cases of alleged baseball espionage.

    "Baseball" by George Vecsey
    A minimalist history from a man who reveres the game and chronicles its roots with great judgment of subject matter and an elegant style.

    "Bim Bam" by Leigh Montville
    Montville, an ex-Sports Illustrated and Boston Globe scribe, has already tackled one of baseball's most interesting stars, Ted Williams. This time he meets the challenge of the game's most colorful—and also most covered—superstar with an effusively stylish bio of the one and only Babe Ruth.

  • TheVonTheVon Posts: 2,725
    I have to second the mention of "Ball Four." Great story and well-written.

    I would also recommend Bob Costas' book "Fair Ball: A Fan's Case for Baseball." It might be a little outdated already, but it was still interesting/compelling reading.

    Red Sox fans should read: "Feeding the Monster: How Money, Smarts, and Nerve Took a Team to the Top" as well as Stephen King's "Faithful."
  • JVetteJVette Posts: 206
    Veeck as in Wreck, Bill Veeck's autobiography is a great read. It gives you some insight as to how owners viewed the game in the 1950's from one of the most colorful owners of all-time.
    - Jack
  • baseballfanbaseballfan Posts: 5,473 ✭✭✭
    i'm reading "the Mick" by mantle right now, i'm not a yankee fan but its pretty good so far. i also like "the only way i know" by ripken.
    i just bought that baseballcard book "great american baseballcard flippin..." i heard that was pretty good as well. the seller of that book has a couple of auctions with 10 baseball books for $10 plus shipping and a couple of the books mentioned he are listed, if you don't mind softcovers you can get 10 for the price of one and go from there. the seller is smellystuff24

    good luck
    Fred

    collecting RAW Topps baseball cards 1952 Highs to 1972. looking for collector grade (somewhere between psa 4-7 condition). let me know what you have, I'll take it, I want to finish sets, I must have something you can use for trade.

    looking for Topps 71-72 hi's-62-53-54-55-59, I have these sets started

  • TabeTabe Posts: 6,236 ✭✭✭✭✭


    << <i>Crazy '08 by Cait Murphy. Covers the 1908 season in very interesting detail.
    DD >>


    I just finished Crazy '08 myself. Excellent book.

    I also recently read "Luckiest Man", a biography of Lou Gehrig. Excellent as well.

    I'll throw in another recommendation for "Big Bam", too. Very well-done.

    Tabe
  • bxbbxb Posts: 805 ✭✭
    My Favorite Summer 1956 - Mickey Mantle and Phil Pepe

    The Teammates - David Halberstam

    Perfect, Once removed - Phillip Hoose

    The Last Best League - Jim Collins
    Capecards
  • cwazzycwazzy Posts: 3,257
    Well, I just picked up two books based on everyones recommendations: The Glory of Their Times and Catcher Was a Spy: the Mysterious Life of Moe Berg. The second one just sounded like a very interesting topic and I can't wait to read it. Thanks again for everyones suggestions. I will pick up a couple more as soon as more funds come in.

    Chris
    Chris
    My small collection
    Want List:
    '61 Topps Roy Campanella in PSA 5-7
    Cardinal T206 cards
    Adam Wainwright GU Jersey
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