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#1
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Posted By: Andy Baran
I know that we have spoken about baseball books in the past. My favorite type of book is what I classify as "19th or early 20th Century Baseball Fiction based on Historical Facts". I understand that this is not a large category. Some examples of these types of books are: |
#2
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Posted By: Bill Cornell
Andy- |
#3
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Posted By: DD
http://dogbert.abebooks.com/servlet/SearchResults?bx=off&sts=t&ds=30&bi=0&yrl=1880&kn=baseball&sortby=2&yrh=1920 |
#4
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Posted By: Jay Miller
Andy--A new book about Ed Delahanty just came out and it is excellent. The title is something like Ed Delahanty and the Emerald Age of Baseball. |
#5
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Posted By: Andy Baran
Is there a fictional story in this book? I thought it was a straight forward biography. |
#6
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Posted By: john/z28jd
Tin Can Lewis by John Dreker,its a short fictional story about the 1 game career of a real player back in 1890 who nothing is known about.Very well written i think, the way the author tells the story of the game back then thru the eyes of a grandfather reminiscing a story of his youth with his grandson. |
#7
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I've been reading this one and very much enjoying it. It was the first "tell all" book by a player, in 1960. Like Ball Four without the more salacious details. |
#8
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Posted By: Julie
The narration is half by "George Weaver" (Buck), and half by a journalist who calls himself "The Yellow Kid." The Weaver parts are excellent, and all is very well reserached. It is NOT an old book, however...just an old subject... |
#9
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Posted By: Julie
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#10
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Posted By: Richard Masson
Try Troy Soos search on Amazon. He has written several baseball fiction stories. The Celebrant remains my favorite. |
#11
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Posted By: runscott
I believe Max Weder collects vintage baseball fiction. |
#12
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Posted By: Scott M
Although neither of these is fiction if you'd still like to read about 19th century or early 20th century baseball then I'd recommend two books that I read over the course of the summer. |
#13
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Posted By: Kevin Cummings
I bought the Delahanty book last week and I'm planning on digging into that soon. |
#14
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Posted By: Andy Baran
Early Dreams appears to be EXACTLY the kind of book that I am looking for. I just ordered it, along with "You Know Me Al", which is mentioned in the product description. I hope both books are as great as they sound. |
#15
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Posted By: Tbob
I tried selling a new copy of Havana Heat (terrific) and Kinsella's Iowa Baseball Confederacy (all about Chance's Cubs) in hardback and dj and nice and neither got a nibble on ebay. A few other baseball books did so-so including the Celebrant, but the sales were pretty disappointing. For now I am keeping my first edition rare When the Yankees Lost the Pennant in great dustjacket (later made in to the play and movie Damn Yankees) and an early edition of 8 Men Out in hb and dj. When I've listed baseball books in the books section on ebay they fall flat. When I list them in the prewar card section they do better but ebay sends me threatening emails about what they are going to do to me and my account for listing them in the wrong place. I guess it's ok to list pages ripped out of books as cards in the prewar cards section but if you try and sell the whole book and AAA hasn't graded it, look out! |
#16
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Posted By: Richard Masson
Wayne Green sells nothing but baseball books, fiction and non-fiction. He produces a catalog 4-5 times a year with hundreds of titles. Do you need an address? |
#17
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Posted By: Bill Cornell
The eBay seller 66boston always has an unusual selection of baseball books: |
#18
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Posted By: Julie
I've ordered "Old Hoss" (sent seller 2 scans of Hoss, too), and "Early Dreams," (which REALLY appears to be written by a knowledgable 19th century scholar, and good fiction, too!) in the last few days... |
#19
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Posted By: Mike Peich
I highly recommend the Delahanty biography (Univ. of Notre Dame Press). It's an informative bio of the Great Del, as well as a good cultural/historical study of baseball in the 1880s/1890s. The author, Jerold Casway, makes a compelling case for the influence of Irish immigrants at this period in baseball's history (40 percent of the players were Irish). He also solves the mystery of Delahanty's death--too much drinking, excessive gambling, huge debts--a player who was not in touch with the reality of his life. Sounds contemporary, doesn't it? |
#20
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Posted By: Max Weder
Andy McCue's baseball bibliography Baseball by the Books is an essential buy in this area. The book covers up to 1992 or so. Andy has been one of the main forces behind http://www.baseballindex.org which is a project to list all baseball publications. A search can be done for baseball fiction. |
#21
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Posted By: Brian H (misunderestimated)
"Blue Ruin" by Brendan Boyd...it's an excellent novel that deals with the 1919 World Series. Interestingly enough, Boyd also wrote the classic "The Great American Baseball Card FLipping, Trading and Bubble Gum Book". |
#22
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Posted By: dennis
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#23
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Posted By: Julie
highly censored because the photo on the front eliminates his "flipping the bird" half-a-finger,--I had nothing to worry about! |
#24
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Posted By: Jeff S
Best Bet in Beantown, by G.S. Rowe. Rowe is also a top-notch scholar and said at a panel at last summer's SABR conference that he ended up writing this (and another) novel about Tim Murnane while writing a biography of Murnane. (Murnane, for those who don't know, was an early player and manager and, based in Boston, became one of the nation's best-known journalists.) |
#25
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Posted By: Julie
McFarland? I've only read "Old Hoss" published by them, and though it doesn't hold a candle to Thomas Mann's "Dr. Faustus," it's pretty good... |
#26
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Posted By: Jeff S
since you asked, Julie, |
#27
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Posted By: runscott
Does anyone else get their mailings? It's great reading. |
#28
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
The only mistakes in "Old Hoss" are factual ('84 Old Judge cards being signed) and pictoral (the Hoss on the cover is the photo with the middle finger of his left hand extended, and they have made it appear to be turned under, like the other fingers). It's quite subtle--they draw a line at his knuckle, and then blended the rest of his finger in with his pants (making it part of a larger shadow on his pants, which doesn't exist in the original photo). |
#29
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Posted By: Jeff S
Andy and others, |
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