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Personally, I recommend this book be read every Spring in anticipation of the upcoming baseball season, such as I have done for the last twenty-three years. It is a wonderful way to get in the mood for great battles on the ball diamond, as well as recapture the joys of youth. Reading this book could become as much a pastime as baseball itself.
Young adult readers will find this book interesting and fun. Parents will appreciate the role model of young Peg Ward, whose standards of conduct are the highest, even when faced with peer pressures, not unlike those of today.
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Within these pages you will find G. H. Flemin's "Kaleidoscopic View" of the infamous Merkle Blunder, Bill James's statistical analysis of the relief pitcher's ERA advantage, and David S. Neft asking that immortal question: "Is Ozzie Smith Worth $2 Million a Season." This is a book that does not talk about Babe Ruth, Joe DiMaggio and Mickey Mantle but rather Hack Wilson, Dick Allen and Roger Maris. For culture there are the poems "Van Lingle Mungo: An Elegiac Ode" and "Baseball Rhyme Time." and then for fun a Ballparks Quiz and Acrostic Puzzle. These are articles that want to talk about the almost no-hitters, newly discovered RBI records and expansion-era managers. But there are also stories about the St. Louis Cardinals planning a rebellion rather than playing a baseball game against the Brooklyn Dodgers and Jackie Robinson and Bob Carroll's argument for 12 players who should be in the Hall of Fame, most of whom are still not there.
This is not a sit down and read at one sitting book. This is a spring training book, to get you ready for the season by getting you to think of the first game lost by the Cincinnati Reds in 1870, the importance of on-base percentage, and a ballplayers name to rhyme with Snider. It is also an effective subscription advertisement for "The National Pastime." I have been rereading a couple of articles from this book every spring (okay, when spring training starts since we have snow on the ground up here until well after Easter) for several years. This is not a book to leave unprotected on your must have list.
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I would consider this to be an excellent volume for anyone who has just finished =Into Thin Air= or =The Climb= and who would like to find more to read in the genre. Harvesting the citation list alone is going to keep my reading pile fat and happy for months!
Disclaimer: I'm not a mountain-climber, and I don't play one on TV; I'm just an average wage slug who enjoys a good story well told.
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The part I found most interesting was the chapter on quarterbacks and the conventional NFL QB rating system and why it is flawed. From there the authors go into a lengthy process of building a better rating system, which more accurately reflects who the most efficient passers in the NFL are.
You would think being written by a bunch of statisticians, this book would be dull, but it is far from it! It is lively and humorous throughout, and is very easy to read. Also, most of the heavy statistics are relegated to notes, so if you are not interested in that sort of thing you can skip it easily.
All told this is an outstanding book to read if you are interested in learning the "Nitty-gritty" behind football statistics.
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by Ernest J. Morrison
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 1995 ISBN 0-89271-063-2
This fine work by Ernest J. Morrison might be a little dry for some readers, but not for those who are; "one of us"; passionate lovers of nature, and the whole of life.
Morrison is a great writer, who has done us all a lasting service by bringing people like J. Horace McFarland to his readers. He has a concise and clear, and yet deeply sensitive way of revealing the true and subtle nature of a personality's inner character. I hope, like John F. Kennedy's "Profiles in Courage," that he will continue to find and hold up to recognition, the lives and dreams of great men and quiet heroes of history who have been lost or forgotten by posterity.
Morrison has shown us in this perceptive biographical sketch of the life of J. Horace McFarland, that not only was McFarland a practical idealist in his work to enrich us all with the enrichment of beauty, but he was also a visionary and an early wholistic thinker who saw, long before many men, some of the truth concerning God's will, and man's needs as reflected in the needs of nature, in what we are only now beginning to see as the bio-one-world.
Mr. McFarland didn't just think of beauty, preservation and reconstitution of nature as being a nice cutesy adjunct or afterthought to the activities and relationship man has with nature. He considered it an absolute necessity to counter-balance the disastrous negative effects that man has had on the environment, and spiritually; a saving grace for the disastrous effect man has had on himself.
Few could argue with this prophetic view from the past, as we begin to realize the universal wisdom and truth in living in healthful harmony with ourselves and with nature; with respect and love instead of the self abuse of exploitation. Horace would say it's time to start giving something back to mother earth, instead of just taking. There are ways to do this, by proper city planning that helps make people proud of their neighborhoods, and by constant beautification, and by protection and replacement of natural resources.
He felt that if mankind is to evolve successfully, he must displace the love of money with the more adaptive love of nature and beauty.
After being involved with the cross pollination and hybridization of plants, he began to see evolution as a process that God uses to change things in His on-going creation of life.
He believed in "equality" and helped get out the vote for women, and was involved with them in the many projects related to nature and beauty, and city planning during his lifetime. He had a view towards equality of value of other life forms- What we might today call an appreciation of, and sensitivity to, bio-diversity. He thought we should all be stewards of nature, and like the emerging global unity paradigm, that we have an obligation and responsibility to nurture and protect it. And that these were democratically based concepts, activities, and relationships. Ie: Of, by, and for the people.
J. Horace was, like a truly religious and spiritual man should be, a person who practiced his religion, his ideals, and his world view, like a daily prayer, each and every day of his life- like a church without walls. He wanted to be remembered as "a man who loved a garden." Indeed, he, materially, nurtured and loved, and helped renew the Garden of Life on this Earth; and will continue to do so spiritually through his life as example, and with his words, and with his works. We could all use a little of the spirit of McFarland in our hearts and in our souls.
McFarland was not only a great defender and protecter of nature and his beloved roses; he himself was like a "Rose of the World," a "lover of all good things, surmounted (and surrounded) by his love of beauty." His life was made up of tentacles of successes that reached far into many diverse areas of endeavor, each supporting and giving sustenance to the main body of his beautiful and high ideals. J. Horace McFarland, indeed a thorn for beauty... and a giant Oak of a man.
Curtis Bard, Editor - Bard Books on CD-ROM and The Computer Classifieds:
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One class of dialect occurs when a reader comes across certain words that have corrupt spellings. However, pronouncing the word as it is spelled enables the speech of the character to be understood. One of the characters, simply called Benny, says, "Everybody but me hash frens" (Grey, 183). This sentence displays two errors that do not make sense by themselves. However, pronouncing theses words aloud in the sentence makes perfect sense. All in all, the warped spellings of words allow the reader to comprehend the corrupt ways the characters talk.
Another type of dialect pertains to words that have different meanings than what a dictionary reads. Instead of the denotation of the word, these words carry a special connotation that is understood by certain types of people because it has gradually blended in with their vocabulary. When a player named Enoch gets into a quarrel with an umpire, the umpire charged him with a five-dollar fine. In response to this, Enoch proclaims frantically, "Make it ten, you mullet" (Grey, 202)! Mullet might not be a familiar word in the context that Enoch uses it. However, to the characters in the novel, this is a universal word that carries an unfavorable meaning. In summary, special words with unique connotations increase the interest of the reader in the novel.
Dialect brings a plethora of qualities to a novel such as The Shortstop. Dialect enables a novel to have an unarguable reality. In the real world, people do not speak in their perfect vernacular. Almost everyone speaks with some type of slang or slurred pronunciation. Furthermore, having many types of dialects persuades a reader to be more interested in a novel. If a novel had every single character talk in their proper language, the story would become tedious to read. The best way to sum up what dialect brings to a story can be found in the world-renowned novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Mark Twain states, "In this book a number of dialects are used... for the reason that without it many readers would suppose that all these characters were trying to talk alike and not succeeding" (Twain, 2).
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Included in the hefty (nearly 2,000 pages) volume is everything you'd expect (player stats, franchise histories, postseason results) and a number of things you might not (Curt Smith's wonderful roster of radio/TV announcers, for instance). It's perfect for whiling away the hours on rainy Sunday afternoons, and invaluable for settling arguments or answering trivia questions.
It would be nice if the next edition included a few more historical essays such as those found in its NFL counterpart, "Total Football II." That's a minor quibble, however, and perhaps impractical considering the voluminous size of the current book. All in all, this is a must-buy for baseball lovers.
Also, I must take umbrage at the decision to arbitrarily devalue the performances of players in the Union Association and Federal League. Their arguments are impeccable but irrelevant. Even if these leagues were inferior, they were still major leagues and their games counted for just as much as did those of the National League, American Association, and American League. If they take this stand, why not also devalue the National League and American Association of 1890, or the NL and AL of 1942-1944. These leagues also had inferior talent; why not arbitrarily devalue them as well?
I am very disappointed by the lack of an all-inclusive fielding register, and the lack of pitcher batting, but I do understand that the economics of space must be acceded to. Nevertheless, it would be nice if Thorn and Palmer would provide us with a website from which we could access this data (sort of an unpublished appendix). I don't ask that they place the entire record online, but for the sake of 'total'-ness I do ask that they make the information accessible for those of us who need to know that Joaquin Andujar had 32 strikeouts in his 57 at bats of 1979, while turning two double plays in that same year.
Complaints aside, this is an excellent book that is truly magnificent. I don't envy Thorn and Palmer in their task of trying to please millions of baseball fans who demand nothing short of perfection. As with umpires, we demand that Thorn and Palmer be perfect, and then we expect them to continue to improve. Amazingly, they somehow manage to do so.