100 Baseball Icons and Not Without Hope
Harvey Frommer on
Sports
The Book Review :
Mark
and Me and
more |
|
|
As we come closer to the start of the 2010 baseball season,
teams and publishers are gearing up for big prizes. Small houses and mega
publishers are all part of the competition mix. More and more sports books
keep hitting the market. So let us sample some more of the
mix.
Mark
and
Me by Jay McGwire
(Triumph,$24.95, 208 pages) is brother Jays story about Mark McGwire.
The sub-title proclaims it is a book about the truth behind
baseballs worst kept secret. For those who cannot get enough of steroids
and the former St. Louis Cardinal slugger this is the book for you
- hashing and rehashing the scandalous and seamy stuff that was paraded all
over the media. It also has the angle that is told by one brother now pitted
against another. We get Jays take on why Mark started using, what he
used, how long his habit lasted. We get a lot of stuff that goes beyond the
headlines.
As for Mark McGwire
reactions:
"I don't plan on ever seeing him again. Jay had to do
something to try to sell a
book."
Mark McGwire has vowed to never read the book and to never
talk to his bro Jay again.
Baseball
Comes Home
by
Dan Valenti (CR Custom Publishing, $24.95, 201 pages, paper) takes a look
at a silver slice of baseball history the Baseball Hall of Fame Game
that began in 1940 and had its last hurrah in
2008. With more than 150 photos
and veteran Valentis polished prose, this tome is
terrific.
Also
by Dan Valenti is Under A Grapefruit
Sun (144 pages, $20 ppd from Valenti, PO Box 1268, Stockbridge,
MA 01262). Prime reading for this time of year Under A Grapefruit
Sun is like going back in a time machine to Red Sox spring training
when Valenti covered the Sox in the 1980s. Yaz, Pesky, Evans, Boggs and more
in full color and in their prime. If you are a member of Red Sox Nation
this is the tome for
you.
I had the pleasure of being on a couple of Ed Randalls
shows. Now I have had the pleasure of reading his
Baseball for the Utterly Confused (McGraw-Hill, $17.95,
232 pages, paper). For those who know their way around the national pastime,
this is not required reading but for all others who want to know the whys
and why nots, this work belongs on your bookshelf.
Upcoming:
In May
- - Are We Winning by Will Leitch (Hyperion, $24.99,
288 pages)
Harvey Frommer is in his 34th consecutive year of writing sports books. A noted oral historian and sports journalist, the author of 40 sports books including the classics: "New York City Baseball,1947-1957" and "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball," his acclaimed REMEMBERING YANKEE STADIUM, an oral/narrative history (Abrams, Stewart, Tabori and Chang) was published in 2008 as well as a reprint version of his classic "Shoeless Joe and Ragtime Baseball." Frommer's newest work CELEBRATING FENWAY PARK: AN ORAL AND NARRATIVE HISTORY OF THE HOME OF RED SOX NATION will be published in 2010.
Frommer sports books are available direct
from the author - discounted and autographed.
FROMMER SPORTSNET (syndicated) reaches a
readership in the millions and is housed on Internet search engines for extended
periods of
time.