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Strange But True Baseball Stories
Benjamin Grimm Jul 08 2008 08:08 AM |
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My daughter, who just turned seven, has the makings of being quite a baseball fan. (My son, 11, is only mildly interested.) I'm getting a kick out of it. I was so proud when she recently observed that left-handed batters have an advantage because they're closer to first base when they complete their swing. I'm sure I had the 1972 paperback and not the 1966 hardcover, but the image on Amazon.com is exactly what I remembered. I think my daugther will get a kick out of reading about Gray and Gaedel, and maybe some of the other stories from that book. And I'll get a kick out of seeing it again. It was written by Furman Bisher, who I later knew as the Atlanta-based columnist for The Sporting News, but I wasn't aware of that when I was reading and re-reading the book. Does anyone else remember this book? Do you have any other childhood baseball books that you remember? I also recall reading The Baseball Life of Willie Mays, Baseball Stars of 1973, and Hammerin' Hank of the Braves.
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Benjamin Grimm Jul 08 2008 08:17 AM |
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AG/DC Jul 08 2008 08:19 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jul 08 2008 08:37 AM |
I think I recall it. If I have it right, I enjoyed it.
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Benjamin Grimm Jul 08 2008 08:22 AM |
I think I remember that chapter!
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Centerfield Jul 08 2008 08:25 AM |
That's great. I can't believe you can remember the stuff you read. I remember reading all sorts of baseball fiction as a kid but for the life of me I can't remember what any of them are. I'll certainly have to try reading that and remember it when my son is older.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 08 2008 08:32 AM |
Books like that tended to leave out the fact that Gray was savagely angry, and considered a bit of a nuisance by teammates.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 08 2008 08:35 AM |
I remember all of those books. Steve Carlton was on the cover of Baseball Stars of '73. I remember that the cover was split, featuring another player, as well.. I also had Football Stars of 1973 with Larry Brown on the cover. And I remember going through a phase at around that time where I read just about every Matt Christopher book I could get my hands on.
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Benjamin Grimm Jul 08 2008 08:36 AM |
Was he?
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 08 2008 08:38 AM |
Bud Parusha was a one-armed outfielder for the Ruppert Mundys. But that ain't no kids book.
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metsguyinmichigan Jul 08 2008 08:39 AM |
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Scholastic Books! I have the 1975 version. I have a Tom Seaver bio that I bought through the schools. There was much weeping when I left it outside and it rained. I later found two copies in a used book store and bought both -- just to be sure. As for Gray, if you ever saw Jim Abbott pitch in person, it was amazing how effortlessly he could switch his glove to the stump and back.
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seawolf17 Jul 08 2008 08:41 AM |
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Wow, classic. And agreed.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 08 2008 08:42 AM |
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Scholastic Books! That's where I got my _____Stars of 19xx books from. From school. Good memory. Who'da thought you could get books from school?
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AG/DC Jul 08 2008 08:44 AM |
When I was working at a book store, I made sure we ordered enough Matt Christopher books to get a baseball autographed by Matt Christopher that I could use as the centerpiece of a display table. A nine-year-old (or so) kid looked at it with awe and asked how he could get Matt Christopher's autograph. I said he could have the ball as soon as my display came down. Damned if he didn't show up almost every day reminding me of my promise until I took it down.
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themetfairy Jul 08 2008 08:48 AM |
I still have Baseball's Zaniest Stars by Howard Liss in my bookshelf -
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AG/DC Jul 08 2008 08:51 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jul 08 2008 09:02 AM |
Casey's looking handsome.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 08 2008 08:54 AM |
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That book's sure got it's peaks and valleys. Some of the passages are among the funniest I've read in my entire life. I probably laughed out loud the first two or ten times I read the book. It's too long, though.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 08 2008 08:54 AM |
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Yeah, I think if you get your arm cut off as a kid you're more likely than not to have some emotional issues. Look at his face! I only know what I'd read myself, but I got the idea that Gray's "determination" to make it was really, really grim determination. The players tolerated him at first but when it was clear he wasn't going to be good enough to play he didn't readily accept it, and players felt he got more chances than he was deserving of. That's zany Casey on the cover.
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Benjamin Grimm Jul 08 2008 08:56 AM Edited 1 time(s), most recently on Jul 08 2008 09:38 AM |
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I had noticed that myself. There's a lot of character and history chiseled into that face.
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soupcan Jul 08 2008 09:37 AM |
I used to read biographies of players.
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Fman99 Jul 08 2008 09:56 AM |
My dad had bought me a couple of Baseball Encyclopaedias. I read and reread through the stats like they were text. Soaked it all up.
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HahnSolo Jul 08 2008 10:23 AM |
BG, don't forget to tell your daughter about Jim Abbott in one-armed ball player discussion.
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Benjamin Grimm Jul 08 2008 10:28 AM |
Well, Jim Abbott had two arms, he was only missing a hand.
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John Cougar Lunchbucket Jul 08 2008 10:55 AM |
Bert Shepard was the other chapter in BASEBALL'S MOST GROTESQUE FREAKS! (Scholastic, 1963)
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AG/DC Jul 08 2008 11:01 AM |
Mike Gallego, John Kruk, Josias Manzanillo --- all men, among others, who boldly played the game with one testical.
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Rockin' Doc Jul 08 2008 11:04 AM |
Unfortunately for him, I guess Chris Snyder could be added to that list when he returns from the DL.
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batmagadanleadoff Jul 08 2008 11:08 AM |
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Pretty ballsy of those guys to play like that, wouldn't you say?
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