Sabtu, 25 Oktober 2014

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The Lords of the Realm: The Real History of Baseball, by John Helyar

About the Author

John Helyar is the author of Lords of the Realm: The Real History of Baseball and the co-author (with Bryan Burrough) of Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco.

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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

1   BEFORE IT WAS ever a business it was a game.   It came out of the 1840s, when teams from New York first crossed the Hudson River to Elysian Fields, laid out a diamond, agreed upon the rules, and played a game they called “base,” later lengthened to “baseball.”   It grew in the 1850s and 1860s, but it remained a gentleman’s sport. Teams rode to their games in decorated carriages, singing their team songs. In country greens and city parks, thousands of young men played. It became too popular to remain amateur for long, in the young entrepreneurial nation.   In 1871, the first league was formed of teams who played for pay. It was called the National Association of Professional Baseball Players, and it was a slapdash thing. Over its five-year life, teams came and went with dizzying rapidity—twenty-five of them in all. So did players. The best ones, called “revolvers,” jumped around between teams for the best offer.   But if it wasn’t a stable business, it was well on its way to becoming the national pastime.   “Like everything else American it came with a rush,” wrote John Montgomery Ward, a star player of the day. “The game is suited to the national temperament. It requires strength, courage and skill; it is full of dash and excitement and though a most difficult game in which to excel, it is yet extremely simple in its first principles and easily understood by everyone.”   The changing landscape of the country had much to do with baseball’s hold on America. As people moved from rural farms into urban tenements during the emerging Industrial Revolution, the game kept a nation in touch with its roots. Baseball was played on vast swatches of green in the middle of dreary, gray cities. Baseball celebrated the rugged individual within a team game. It came to be called the National Pastime, not just because it was played and watched by so many people but because it so resembled the national character.   Albert Goodwill Spalding tried to export baseball to other countries. The owner of a team and of a sporting-goods empire, he saw vast worldwide sales of bats and balls. In 1888, he even sponsored a globe-trotting tour of exhibition games that visited Hawaii, Australia, Ceylon, Egypt, Italy, France, England, and Ireland. In one far-flung locale after another, America’s top players were watched with profound indifference. The game took root only in America.   Like the pioneering country still being settled, this game valued both brute strength and daring ingenuity. It also countenanced a certain amount of cheating. Baseball was beautiful but tough, a sport not unlike the Chicago of Nelson Algren: “… where the bulls and the foxes live well and the lambs wind up head-down from the hook.”   So too would baseball mirror the period’s epic struggles in commerce. Robber barons were coming to the fore and business was not polite. Disputes between labor and management were solved not by federal mediators but by Pinkerton thugs. Baseball would have its own early bare-knuckle fights for control of the game and business. Then the owners would seize it for a hundred years.   “n the same spring when Sitting Bull swept Custer at the Little Big Horn, the National League of Professional Baseball Clubs was created. The year was 1876, and the enterprise was better known as the National League. It ushered in a new way of doing business in baseball: a central office in New York and an aim to curb the chaos that afflicted the previous league.   By 1879, its eight teams had developed a compact. At season’s end, each would “reserve” five players, making them off-limits to any other team. The players were not told about this agreement. They’d simply discover that they couldn’t catch on with any but their own team.   Thus the “reserve clause” was born, and the original was only a modest version. When another “major league,” the American Association, began in the early 1880s, the compact was extended to them and the annual “reserve list” grew to eleven players. It was on its way to encompassing every player.   The first recorded owner’s wail over salaries came in 1881. “Professional baseball is on the wane,” declared Albert Spalding, owner of Chicago’s National League team. “Salaries must come down or the interest of the public must be increased in some way. If one or the other does not happen, bankruptcy stares every team in the face.”   The first recorded salary cap came in 1889. The owners set top pay at $2,500, with a tiered pay scale ranging downward from there. The lowest classified players would have to sweep up the ballpark or take tickets.   The Brotherhood of Professional Base Ball Players, a union formed in 1885, rebelled against the pay scale and the cap. It formed the Players National League, to begin play in 1890.   “There was a time when the League [that is, the original National League] stood for integrity and fair dealing; today it stands for dollars and cents,” said John Montgomery Ward, the star player and union president. “Players have been bought, sold and exchanged as though they were sheep instead of American citizens.”   Noble words, but the Players League lasted just one season. When the American Association went out of business too, the National League had the majors all to itself. It would until the turn of the century.   Then a man named Byron Bancroft Johnson, who was running a minor league in the Midwest, decided to capitalize on National League players’ discontent with their $2,500 salary cap. He unleashed the owners in his Western League to sign the major-leaguers, and they attracted more than a hundred, including star second baseman Napoleon Lajoie. Then they moved the franchises into bigger cities and renamed themselves the American League.   They were soon outdrawing the National League. The new Boston Pilgrims, for instance, paid $4,000 to star third baseman Jimmy Collins to defect from the rival Boston Beaneaters. The Pilgrims picked up several other prominent National Leaguers, including Cy Young, from St. Louis. With the legendary pitcher winning thirty-three games, the new team attracted 527,000 fans in 1901, more than double the Beaneaters’ draw.   At a “peace meeting” in 1903, the two leagues agreed on an end to raiding, a common reserve system, and a single ruling National Commission. It would consist of the president of each league, plus a third member to be agreed upon by them.   Baseball boomed in the early 1900s. From 1901 to 1909, the combined leagues more than doubled their attendance to 7.2 million. That growth closely tracked the rise of urban America. In 1900, 40 percent of the country’s population lived in cities; by 1910, 46 percent. In 1920, it would reach 50 percent. Increasingly, the centerpiece of those cities was their major league ballparks. Filled by 30,000 and more cheering fans, they created a sense of community for the newcomers—whether from abroad or from the countryside. From 1909 to 1913 alone, six classics came on line: Philadelphia’s Shibe Park, Pittsburgh’s Forbes Field, Chicago’s Comiskey Park, Boston’s Fenway Park, and New York’s Polo Grounds and Ebbets Field.   These great houses brought people together, in an age when cities had been splintered by industrialization and immigration. They created heroes for the waves of new immigrants, whose hopes and identities were wrapped up in players like Honus Wagner (for the Germans), Stan Coveleski (for the Poles), and Ping Bodie, born Francesco Stephano Pezzolo (for the Italians). Earlier, when Irish immigrants dominated baseball, stars like Mike “King” Kelly performed the same function.   As baseball grew into a bigger commercial enterprise, money dominated headlines and the public consciousness. When pitcher Rube Marquard was a dud for the Giants, after being bought for a princely sum, he became known as “the eleven-thousand-dollar lemon.” A man named David Fultz, who had organized a new union called the Players Fraternity, spent much of his time disputing stories about overpaid players. Some of them didn’t even make $1,000, he pointed out.   Baseball’s growth and profitability ultimately drew backers for a new league in 1914. It was called the Federal League, and it was the best thing to happen to the players since the days of the “revolvers.” The average salary, $3,800 in 1913, rose to $7,300 in 1915. Stars used the rival league’s threat to ratchet up their pay. Ty Cobb nearly doubled his salary, to $20,000. Tris Speaker got an unheard-of two-year contract that totaled $36,000. The owner of the Philadelphia Athletics, Connie Mack, unwilling to meet such prices, sold off much of his pennant-winning 1914 team, including the famous “hundred-thousand-dollar infield” (for such was the sum his star infielders fetched).   The players finally had some leverage and the leagues grudgingly recognized the Players Fraternity. Fultz was able to win a few modest gains, like getting the teams to start paying for players’ uniforms and giving ten-year veterans the right to an unconditional release. (Players were previously in the position of Mordecai “Three Finger” Brown, a top pitcher for the Cubs for years, whom they sold to a minor league team when they had no more use for him.)   Yet the Federal League, for all its vigorous bidding, still could land only a handful of established players. The Federal owners sued the established leagues in 1915, charging they’d blocked the newcomers from the player market, restraining free trade and violating antitrust laws. They endeavored to get the case before a Chicago judge they thought would lend a sympathetic ear.  

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Product details

Paperback: 640 pages

Publisher: Ballantine Books (March 1, 1995)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 0345465245

ISBN-13: 978-0345465245

Product Dimensions:

5.5 x 1.2 x 8.5 inches

Shipping Weight: 2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Average Customer Review:

4.9 out of 5 stars

32 customer reviews

Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#15,594 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

My present baseball library consists of about 50 - 60 books, ranging from biographies, baseball statistics, and baseball history. “Lords of the Realm” is the best baseball book I’ve ever read. It is very well written, totally engaging, and incredibly informative about owner-player relationships over the years. Parts of the book are laugh-out-loud funny. I plan on re-reading it before the start of next season.

Helyar's book dives into the long, tumultuous history of the business of baseball. He shows the evolution of the game from a sport completely dominated by the owners to a struggle between the owners and the labor union. Most chapters show an evolution from this standpoint, with a few asides about popular baseball issues during their time (i.e. the suspension of George Steinbrenner and Pete Rose). Lots of interesting tidbits can be found in this book, such as why Dodgers Stadium serves only Miller beer products and how Catfish Hunter got his nickname. One downside is the book is slightly lengthy (over 600 pages), but a large majority of it is relevant, interesting, and easy to read. I strongly recommend this for any fan of baseball.

This is an excellent read for what is probably going to happen when the next CBA comes up. With the 2017 off season issues the Lords have woken up the MLBPA. Should be interesting.

One of the best baseball books ever written. Excellent service. Lovely book. I would not hesitate to order form these folks again.

I can't imagine a book that better documents the history of baseball. The book is extremely well researched and brings many events together to explain why Major League Baseball is where it is when the book ends in the early nineteen nineties. The only disappointment I had with the book is that it stops before one of the most significant and controversial events in Major League Baseball history, the 1993 lockout.

This is my favorite baseball book. I'm a huge fan of the game, and like the nostalgia aspect of it (the first three innings of Ken Burns baseball are perfect to me), but this book takes you behind the public face of the game. There are plenty of books that focus on individual players, seasons, and teams, but few that focus on baseball from the business and particularly labor aspect of the game. After reading this, you can see why the MLBPA and MLB enjoy relative peace after their epic battles while the other leagues still ride roughshod over their respective unions. It has all the characters that make baseball history so entertaining; Kenesaw Mountain Landis, Bowie Kuhn, Charlie Finley, Marvin Miller... and related interesting stories, Catfish Hunter getting free agency because Charley Finley was sloppy with payments is the most amusing to me. The book is primarily written from a pro-player/labor view point, so if that doesn't appeal to you, this might not be the best read other than that, it holds up.

Anyone wanting to know what happened in the board rooms, this is the book. Baseball has survived in spite of itself!

If you love baseball and are interested in the business and history of the game this book is a must read. one of the best baseball books I've read in at least 100.

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Senin, 20 Oktober 2014

Free Ebook , by Paul Boesch

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Product details

File Size: 2508 KB

Print Length: 248 pages

Page Numbers Source ISBN: 1497434475

Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited

Publisher: Miocene Press (December 2, 2018)

Publication Date: December 2, 2018

Language: English

ASIN: B07L36YHXL

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#1,696 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

I have a couple hundred WWII books in my library, I've been fascinated with the subject for many years. This book is a must have, I almost passed it by because I thought it must not be much at .99 cents...was I ever surprised! This book tells the side of the war not often spoken of...the hell these men endured should be known to every American. Unfortunately our younger generations don't even know where "Germany" is let alone the suffering and sacrifice of our greatest generation...sad! One of my favorite quotes from the book:"The big guns belched their shells with thunderous, unannounced, ear-splitting roars that reverberated against the wooded hills and echoed until it seemed we were caught in the middle of some giant cauldron with hundreds of satanic monsters banging sledge hammers against the sides with fiendish glee"The book is a detailed history and well written, it has good detail but not the type that puts you to sleep, it's 248 pages, I read it in two nights because I didn't want to put it down. If you're a WWII buff...you'll love this account. My Dad served in the big one as a gunnery Sargent but he was never in the hell zones that these guys faced...my greatest respect to those men that followed orders and did what they were trained to do. Americans today owe a debt of gratitude to the WWII generation that can never be repaid!

The storytelling is unusually engaing for a battlefield memoir, and the battle itself is... really quite something. Total recommendation, as regards the work of the author. If you're even considering buying this book, the review you need to hear is this: yes, this is a book you'll treasure.That said, some — any — work from the publisher to include additional geographical details to help orient the reader would have been so, so, so, so... ...so, so, so.... so appreciated. It's a confusing series of events, and Huertgen itself is a confusing battle, and this is a [lovely, but confusingly] firsthand account with fairly little big-picture perspective to offer. These could have simply been maps, or — seeing as how this book was written over fifty years ago — finding time for a historian to pen a brief foreward laying out a birds-eye view of the war-is-hellish proceedings the author takes us through.This is wishful thinking; all over the place are signs that the publisher spun this print out quickly — for instance, I can simply, unhyperbolically *assure you* that this manuscript (as seen in this specific run; not the original author's work) went *literally without a single pass of proofreading,* as evinced throughout the book by places where an 'r' and an 'n' become an 'm' based on a mistake no language-speaker would make, leading to sentences like "the kitten played with a ball of yam" [made-up example, natch], and — far more greviously — in half a dozen places in the book, a paragraph break inexplicably splits a sentence in half, for no text-based reason at all, assuredly because something confused the automated scanning process.The best and simplest evidence that the publisher didn't give a crap about this print is this: the *namesake of the book* is spelled consistently throughout its pages — and on it's *cover* — as 'Huertgen.' The cover says "Road to Huertgen."Peel back the cover, and on the title page you'll find "Road to Heurtgen."Anyway. Paul Boesch was an amazing officer and his book offers an amazing account. I wonder what *hiring a single proofreader* to do *a single pass* might have done to honor this fine, mangled manuscript.

This is an excellent well told personal account of one infantry officers experiences in the advance of the Army into German territory after the D-Day Invasion. It culminates with action in the battle of Huertgen Forest and his injury and advance to the rear for recuperation. It’s one of the best written personal day to day accounts I’ve read of combat in the European Theater. Paul Boesch was to leave the service and become known as a professional wrestler at least according to Wikipedia but seemed one hell of a soldier, officer and leader of men. He could have been a General of significant stature with his military intelligence, dedication, patriotism and bravery as I read his saga of tireless advance, personal love for his wife, dedication to his infantry officer friend Jack, and untold death and sacrifice in the foxholes, fields and woods of France, Luxemborg, and Western Germany. He writes of the day to day hell, mud and cold, dying and wounded comrades and and occasional downtime in small towns and Paris on local leave, the scenic countryside while moving to different battle zones, the letters to and from Eleanor, all in moving detail and at times indifference to the death and destruction no person should ever have to live through. These men were amazing. I avoided five stars only because I wished it could have preceded with and gone on another hundred pages, the end was abrupt but probably lifesaving for this heroic Lieutenant. A literal Hell of a Story.

...is personal to me. It is where my father, an infantry lieutenant, 9th Div, 60th Regiment, was wounded by German mortar shrapnel in 1944. His wound, and his experience, stayed with him all his life - and mine. Lt. Bosch tells an experience exactly in accord with my father's tales: The controlled fear, the aggression against the enemy, but above all, concern for his men. Boesch emerged from the battle in pain, as my father did, yearning to return to his unit, but unable to do so. His experiences in between present an experiene that is authentic, gripping and compelling.

What war is really like at it's worse ! I had to pause reading this story and steel myself for the finish. What those boys went through was unbelievable. Our men will fight like this only if they believe in what they're fighting for. The Germans could not surrender fast enough when the fighting really got tough, they knew Hitler was mad. My 92 year old friend fought in this battle and I wanted to read about what it was REALLY like! May the good Lord bless those boys who gave this ultimate sacrifice. Those white crosses in Europe mean much more to me now!

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Minggu, 19 Oktober 2014

Free Ebook Symphony for the City of the Dead: Dmitri Shostakovich and the Siege of Leningrad

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Symphony for the City of the Dead: Dmitri Shostakovich and the Siege of Leningrad

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Audible Audiobook

Listening Length: 10 hours and 20 minutes

Program Type: Audiobook

Version: Unabridged

Publisher: Candlewick on Brilliance Audio

Audible.com Release Date: September 22, 2015

Whispersync for Voice: Ready

Language: English, English

ASIN: B015HL4DRW

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I was not really familiar with the works of Shostakovich, but having been to Saint Petersburg several times and speaking with people about the siege of Leningrad, I thought the book would provide an interesting read. It more than delivered on this and I found it hard to put down. The photographs contained in this book are truly fantastic and not just a bunch of blurry indistinguishable ones. The story was both fascinating and moving, while at the same time giving me a new level of respect and appreciation for the residents of Leningrad, while showing how despicable the communist leaders truly were. It was also eye opening to learn about how this seventh symphony was played all over the world and universally understood. Even the Nazi soldiers (some of them) when they heard this symphony being played on loud speakers throughout the city understood that they would never be able to win this city, while also understanding that rather than the subhuman Slavs that they had been told lived there by Hitler that only the strongest and most human of humans could produce such music after such a prolonged siege and period of starvation. I had a SPB resident tell me this past summer about her father as a child and his evacuation from Leningrad during the siege. She spoke to me about the dangerous trip across the lake in the middle of winter. To then read about this "Road of Life" within the book in great detail, brought the earlier story I heard into much sharper detail. It was a good book that I hated to see end, although it is not a short one. After reading this book I bought the symphony to listen to and found the whole experience very enlightening after understanding the circumstances that surrounded its birth.

Wow. Seriously. Wow. This is an exquisitely written book, filled with such power and emotion that it moved me to tears on several occasions. The depth of the research and the honesty with which it is presented is impressive, and kudos to the author for this. I'm not really a huge non-fiction person, and I pretty much never read about war, but this one blew me out of the water. I don't give out five star ratings very often, but this one absolutely deserved it. The proof? Not only did I actually go out and buy the book, but I also bought a recording of the complete symphonies of Shostakovitch. I can't stop thinking about this book, even days later. Read it. You won't regret it.

Ostensibly this is a book for younger readers, perhaps for High School Advanced Placement English, Music or History students. This unassuming book however can hold its own in terms of pure scholarship. I am a subscriber to DSCH, and own every book I've been able to get my hands on on the life and music of Dmitri Shostakovitch, beginning with "Testimony", as told by Shostakovitch to Solomon Volkov and and New York Times journalist Harrison E. Salisbury's "The 900 Days:The Siege of Leningrad." A superb story teller, M.T. Anderson has created the most fully integrated book on Shostakovitch life & times thus far. There are those who consider Shostakovitch to be Gustav Mahler's heir apparent as master of the Symphonic form. We can only wish that someday a writer will come to the fore such as Henri-Louie de LaGrange did for the life & music of Mahler, & will write the definitive book(s) on Shostakovitch. For readers young AND old, Anderson's book will breath life into the story of this tormented soul who was the 20th Centuries most versatile composer.

M.T. Anderson is one of my favorite authors ever, young adult or otherwise, serious or silly. His "Feed" changed my entire perspective on our online world — and I was 42 at the time — and his "Jasper Dash and Flame-Pits of Delaware" is still one of the funniest books I've ever read. When I saw that he had written a book about one of my favorite composers ever, I one-clicked that puppy faster than you can blink. I was not disappointed.I knew the general story of Shostakovich's 7th Symphony, of his composing it during the Siege of Leningrad and what a splash it made across the world at the time, but Anderson presents an unbelievably detailed history of Shostakovich's early life in Leninist Soviet Union, Stalin's brutal reign, the war and the siege, and through it all, Shostakovich's composition of his huge 'war' symphony. It's a complete picture of an utterly foreign world to us, and Anderson brings it all round to the importance of art/music and how it keeps us human even in the worst of times. I was very sorry to see the book end.

I am a classical music lover and I thought this book was outstanding. The author provides the background of what is going on in Russia as it impacts on composer, Dmitri Shostakovich. I had no idea of the torments the Russian people went through as things in the country went from imperial rule to that of Lenin and then Stalin. In America, we hear much about the persecution of the Jews by Germany, but not about the thousands of Russians who were starved, sent to labor camps, tortured, shot, etc. The City of Leningrad was under siege for over a year while bombed and blockaded by the Germans. Shostakovich's 7th symphony (the Leningrad) was played all over the world and even by an orchestra of starving musicians within the city. It brought feelings of solidarity and hope to those who heard it.

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