Baseball Writing, Listed

Guide to Baseball Fiction

Until tonight I hadn’t heard of this page, which seems to be a bibliography (and maybe a filmography) of baseball stuff. I know that I checked the Dixie Association, which is my favorite baseball novel that isn’t the Universal Baseball Association, Henry J. Waugh proprietor, and it was not only listed but adequately summarized in a few sentences. It made me want to read that excellent novel again.

There seem to also be lists of movies and other baseball productions in different media. Suffice it to say, if you’re interested in reading writing about baseball, this is a great place to visit.

Baseball Fiction

Oona Short — Slow Trains Literary Journal

I’m a member of the Park Slope Food Coop, which is the biggest food coop in the country. Which means that I (along with my wife) swap 2.75 hours each of work every month for the right to buy the best produce, grass-fed meats, and other organic and artisanal products (like cheese, grains, and canned goods, and rainforest chocolate) for about 20 percent less than we’d pay at the local non-coop markets. That works about to about 35 percent off Whole Foods.

We think this is a pretty decent financial deal, but the fact is that working at the coop is almost always a gas. Want to know who lives in your community? Work with them.

I work checkout, which means I scan people’s groceries, mainly, which offers a great opportunity to talk to them about all the food they’re bringing home, how to prepare it, how to best appreciate it.

This past week I “checked out” the significant other of one of my co-workers and while weighing the produce we somehow got into a discussion about baseball (okay, she asked me what I wrote about). She teaches dance, and told me about a woman she had in one of her classes who loved baseball and wrote about it. She seemed to find it odd that there were two coop members interested in baseball, though I can testify that there are many more.

I Googled her student’s name and happened upon the story linked here. I don’t know anything about Oona Short except what I read in this story, which is 18 years old. The reason I link is because the headlong storytelling (which has an attractive velocity if not exactly an economy), about an aspiring Baseball Annie and her somewhat underrealized grasp upon reality, is rather deft.

Ultimately, Oona takes the details of her observations of the game and turns them into a tale of obsession and acceptance that does a good job of making her enthusiasm for the game (something all of us reading this share) feel real. Bravo.

The Writer’s Almanac from American Public Media

The Writer’s Almanac from American Public MediaI linked to that radio show, but they don’t have permalinks to individual pieces. This beauty is perfect for the opening week of baseball season. Or any week really.

Poem: “Assignment #1: Write a poem about Baseball and God” by Philip E. Burnham, Jr. from Housekeeping: Poems Out of the Ordinary. © Ibbetson Street Press, 2005. Reprinted with permission.

Assignment #1: Write a poem about Baseball and God

And on the ninth day, God
In His infinite playfulness
Grass green grass, sky blue sky,
Separated the infield from the outfield,
Formed a skin of clay,
Assigned bases of safety
On cardinal points of the compass
Circling the mountain of deliverance,
Fashioned a wandering moon
From a horse, a string and a gum tree,
Tempered weapons of ash,
Made gloves from the golden skin of sacrificial bulls,
Set stars alight in the Milky Way,
Divided the descendants of Cain and Abel into contenders,
Declared time out, time in, stepped back,
And thundered over all of creation: “Play ball!”

Thanks, Bruce.

Peter Gammons: The Mitchell Report Song –

Exhibitionist – Boston.com

I was hoping for a video link, which would have been more entertaining, but instead got comments filled with vitriol for Gammons because he didn’t break the steroids story back in the day. I’m not sure that’s fair, to single Gammons out anyway. Is it credible that he sat on actual evidence players were using?

What’s certainly true is that the press didn’t shrink from the story in general. Remember the uproar when the report found McGwire’s andro on the shelf in his locker?

Too bad the lyrics aren’t better.

FANTASYLAND documentary film

MLB Radio Fans Forum

We’re a fan of Sam Walker’s Fantasyland, about his year trying to beat the so-called experts in Tout Wars American League experts league, and so we can’t help but be a fan of the attempt of some filmmakers to recreate the magic in Fantasyland: the Documentary.

The link here is to a posting asking for those who might be interested in being the guy to walk in Sam’s shoes this year to respond. I can think of countless not-yet experts who can do the job. Whether or not that’s going to make a good movie is tough to say, but good luck out there.

Video: James Wolcott on Norman Mailer, 1991

Entertainment & Culture: vanityfair.com

When Norman Mailer died recently I was surprised by the number of friends who told me that Harlot’s Ghost is the book of Mailer’s to read. I’m a huge fan, have read most of the major books and some of the less major, but lost interest in his later books.

About Harlot’s Ghost I remember bad reviews, but with such recommendations I’ll have to find a copy.

In the meantime, here is a short film directed by the excellent Mary Harron (I Shot Andy Warhol, American Psycho) for a PBS TV show that is really a review of Harlot’s Ghost by the excellent Jim Wolcott. It makes me want to wade into those 1,400 page a little less, but is well worth watching for more than the simple review.