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Koppett's Concise History of Major League Baseball by Leonard Koppett
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Koppett's Concise History of Major League Baseball

by Leonard Koppett

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33None176,302 (4.17)None
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Carroll & Graf Publishers (2004), Paperback

Member:stnylan
Collections:Your libraryRating:****
Tags:Baseball, Baseball History, Read, Sport, American History
Recently added byprivate library, bpruden, waxalibris, ohforfour, illiniseb, beverage, thoughtfulape, prisoner, cr124, gey57
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Baseball

Herman Dehlman

Ned Williamson

Vic Aldridge

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0786712864, Paperback)

The why behind Hall of Fame sportswriter Leonard Koppett's Concise History is almost as impressive as the authoritative and fascinating volume itself. Given that baseball's best pitch is the richness of its lore, Koppett was appalled that upon their arrival in the majors, contemporary stars like Yankee first baseman Don Mattingly knew nothing of Lou Gehrig, and Ken Griffey Jr. had little more awareness of Jackie Robinson than his name. If the players themselves don't appreciate the legacy or importance of what they're part of, what chance do the rest of us have? Koppett's mission is to change that.

What makes the Concise History such a valuable addition to an already packed baseball bookshelf is that it's an original. First and foremost, its strong, narrative push spans the divide between statistical encyclopedias and the chronicles that generally focus on individual years or teams or issues. It's quite thorough--reaching back to the 1840s and covering the game up through the 1998 sale of the Dodgers--clearly linking the game of baseball to the business of baseball. It covers trends as well as players and events, and, in one of its most useful features, offers succinct seasonal recaps at the end of each chapter. Koppett's a fine writer with a well-established voice, which he uses to analyze as well as report; he's no fence straddler on the more complex questions like free agency, franchise moves, collusion, realignment, and the replacement of family ownership by conglomerates. Like a good home run race, it's a book unique to this particular game, and there's nothing quite like it anywhere. --Jeff Silverman

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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