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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Wright State University

Communication Faculty Publications

2007

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Book Review: A Game Of Brawl, Scott D. Peterson Dec 2007

Book Review: A Game Of Brawl, Scott D. Peterson

Communication Faculty Publications

Felber's book is more than just a close account of the 1897 baseball season: on the way to the September showdown between the Baltimore Orioles and the Boston Beaneaters, his readers attend what passed for spring training in the 1890s, observe the struggles of the lone umpire on the field, and follow the efforts to open up Sunday baseball by thwarting the Blue Laws.


Book Review: The Fade-Away, Scott D. Peterson Oct 2007

Book Review: The Fade-Away, Scott D. Peterson

Communication Faculty Publications

Even without the baseball on the cover and the reference to Christy Mathewson's out pitch, fans of baseball fiction should have no doubt that The Fade-away is a sport novel. The town baseball team is the heart of Port Newton, as revealed by the newspaper clippings that make up a number of the book's chapters. Baseball is the main concern of the book's narrators, from former-player Doc Fuller to second baseman Calvin Elwell, and Sophie Fuller, Doc's daughter and Calvin's girlfriend.


Book Review: The Great God Baseball, Scott D. Peterson Sep 2007

Book Review: The Great God Baseball, Scott D. Peterson

Communication Faculty Publications

The stated goals of this book are both evangelical and scholarly as Hye seeks to convince his readers, including the casual and non-baseball varieties, to pick up the nine books in his "lineup." He also seeks to fill some of the gaps in sport literature scholarship and have his book serve as "an agent for the intellectual, spiritual, and emotional renewal offered by the great game and literature of baseball" (12).


Book Review: Town Ball, Scott D. Peterson Mar 2007

Book Review: Town Ball, Scott D. Peterson

Communication Faculty Publications

This handsome volume would make an excellent addition to the coffee table book collection of any fan of amateur baseball, but it would also be of special interest to cultural and sports historians who specialize in the post-World War Two era and the upper Midwest. Just as its title hearkens back to the earliest days of baseball, Town Ball takes its readers to one of the last great heydays of the game and allows them to get lost among wooden bleachers under the cloud-filled skies of a Georgia O'Keefe painting.