Synopsis
Every year, a varied line-up of talented writers step up to the plate to find inspiration at the ballpark. The opportunity to view each passing season through the lens of such an array of talents and perspectives has prompted USA TODAY Sports Weekly to launch the first ever annual collection of the finest baseball writing of the year. Culled from newspapers, Web sites, books, and magazines, this book examines the major news and events of the season—from Barry Bonds’s quest for immortality amid steroid rumors to Randy Johnson’s obtainment of it with a perfect game at age forty-one—as explored by such stellar reporters as Lisa Winston, Bob Nightengale, Buster Olney, Bob Ryan, and Rob Neyer. Sports Weekly editor Paul White also chooses samples of the year’s best writing about the game’s past, shedding new light on some of its most cherished teams and players: Leigh Montville’s biography of Ted Williams and Jeff Pearlman’s The Bad Guys Won, an exposé of the raucous ’86 world champion Mets, to name just two examples. USA TODAY Sports Weekly’s Best Baseball Writing 2005 marks the beginning of what will be an eagerly awaited annual event for baseball fans and enthusiasts of superlative sports writing.
Reviews
For a sport that lends itself so well to literature, it's surprising that this collection of baseball writings, which is slated to be an annual event, is the first of its kind. That's not to say that there hasn't been plenty written on the sport, however, and this anthology demonstrates the full range of fine baseball literature available. Silverman and Spira have done a yeoman's work scouring newspapers, magazines and books for the cream of the crop, drawing together both noted and little known writers on the subject. Dave Bidini, a "Canadian rocker," delights with his account of his time spent following a third-tier Italian baseball team, whose players drink espresso in the dugout, snack on panini spread with grape jelly ("the Italian athlete's equivalent of an energy bar") and play not for money or fame but "for the joy of play." Ben Osborne's firsthand take on the highly anticipated return of baseball to Brooklyn in the form of the minor league Cyclones possesses a similar homespun charm, as it places readers in the stands with Rudy Giuliani, Chuck Schumer and thousands of reminiscing baseball fans there to celebrate Opening Day. A few pieces, such as Tyler Kepner's New York Times article covering the Yankees' trip to Japan, seem present more to chart the year's biggest events than the year' best baseball writing. Thankfully, these more mundane works, the sort any fan comes across in the sports section, are kept to a minimum. As a nod to the most highly publicized baseball book of the year, the editors include an excerpt from Pete Rose's My Prison Without Bars. The anthology succeeds, however, on the shoulders of those works found in quieter corners, those places in which serious baseball fans, and fans of good sports writing in general, can sit comfortably and read for hours.
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This first of an annual series from USA Today/Sports Weekly will be welcomed by hardcore fans, who are omnivorous in their baseball reading tastes. Of the 25 articles reprinted here, there are fine pieces on Red Sox knuckleballer Tim Wakefield (the New Yorker), former Dodger player (now Oakland general manager) and homosexual Billy Bean (Going the Other Way), and the premature death, at age 41, of former star third-baseman Ken Caminiti (San Diego Union-Tribune). But fussier readers might pass on reading former Yankee coach Don Zimmer's "whinefest" over his treatment by owner George Steinbrenner (The Zen of Zim); Ralph Kiner's anachronous, boys-will-be-boys reminiscence of his playing days in the 1940s and 1950s (Baseball Forever); and a too-lengthy tribute to the long-gone Kansas City Royals Baseball Academy (1970-74). They might also prefer their baseball writing with a little more bite than what the nine selections from USA Today/Sports Weekly offer. Still, this offers a worthwhile look-see for active sports collections. Alan Moores
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