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Jerome Holtzman on Baseball

Jerome Holtzman on Baseball

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Author: Jerome Holtzman
Publisher: Sports Publishing LLC
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $3.93
You Save: $21.02 (84%)



New (14) Used (10) from $3.39

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 679837

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 250
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.1

ISBN: 158261976X
Dewey Decimal Number: 796.357
EAN: 9781582619767
ASIN: 158261976X

Publication Date: March 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: Brand new. Perfect condition.

Similar Items:

  • The Jerome Holtzman Baseball Reader
  • Baseball, Chicago Style, Revised Edition
  • Counselor: A Life at the Edge of History
  • October 1964
  • Branch Rickey: Baseball's Ferocious Gentleman

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
Sportswriter Jerome Holtzman has been around the game of baseball for more than 60 years. During that span he's met and worked alongside most of the greatest writers American sports and the game of baseball have ever known.

In his sixth book, Jerome Holtzman on Baseball, he shares colorfully in-depth stories about the lives and careers of such legendary scribes as Grantland Rice, Red Smith, Jimmy Cannon, Shirley Povich, and many others. Enveloped inside these personality sketches are heretofore hidden tales about baseball's greatest players, managers and characters. Baseball's best personas spring to life in the words of the men and women whose job it was to unearth their flaws and exalt their talents.

These men and women were the Hemingways of baseball sportswriting. Holtzman's unique ability to relate their impact on the game they covered adds a new chapter to our study of the history of baseball. Meet "The Purple Prose Gang," learn of the impact that advanced statisticians had on how the game was covered, and read of the rise of female scribes in sports.

Holtzman dusts off the annals of baseball history in these pages, and places the sport's evolution in a fresh context. Just as baseball itself has progressed from the days of the dead-ball era through the invention of free agency to today's record-shattering times, so too has the art of sportswriting and the artists who man the press box 162 days a year. Jerome Holtzman on Baseball is your passage through the turnstile.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Stories of the Men Who Write the Stories   August 3, 2005
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

The much respected Chicago sports writer and baseball historian Jerome Holtzman has treated us to 209 pages of information on several baseball writers over the past century. Several of these writers I have heard of before, but Holtzman provides us with anecdotes of men such as John Kieran, Stanley Woodward, Paul Gallico, Hugh Fullerton, Charlie Einstein, and several others. Einstein, editor of the Four Fireside baseball anthologies, put together a baseball library in itself with these four treasures. Included in one of them is Frank Sullivan's piece on "The Cliche Expert Testifies on Baseball" which Holtzman has included in part. Included in the chapter on Hugh Fullerton is Joe Jackson's confession regarding his part in the crooked 1919 World Series. George Phair was one who penned poetic verse in his stories such as "Walter Alston was a myth. And then they gave us Mayo Smith. But now they've got us over a barrel. Who in the hell is Kirby Farrell?" Who is the only first baseman to record three assists in one inning? The answer, surprisingly enough, is "Dr. Strangeglove" himself, Dick Stuart, who fielded three grounders in a game at Yankee Stadium in 1963 and made three flips to the pitcher covering first base. I did find some misspelled words that got by the editor. Holtzman states that it was during Ford Frick's "watch" when Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color line. Holtzman should have clarified that it was during Frick's "watch" as president of the National League, and not as commissioner, when this took place. The commissioner during this historic event was Albert "Happy" Chandler. Regardless, the book is very enjoyable to read, and it is interesting to read stories regarding the men who write the stories for us to read.

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