Boston Globe Review
Posted: June 16th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Reviews | No Comments »“(An) engaging look at a significant, though often forgotten, chapter in
the game’s history.”
“Compelling” says LA Times
Posted: June 16th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Reviews, Updates | No Comments »Shapiro, author of the terrific “The Last Good Season: Brooklyn, the Dodgers, and Their Final Pennant Race Together,” does an admirable job telling this complex story.
Chicago Tribune op-ed The Devil and Charlie Weeghman
Posted: June 16th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: bloggers | No Comments »Chicago’s two remaining baseball clubs open a three-game series at Wrigley Field on Tuesday night and you are thinking, remaining?
Cubs. Sox. And the ghost.
Read Op-ed here from Chicago Tribune
Editors’ Choice NY Times Book Review
Posted: June 12th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Reviews, Updates, bloggers | No Comments »Boston Globe Review
Posted: June 11th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Reviews, Updates | No Comments »Michael Shapiro elegantly describes the ill-fated effort to establish the eight-team Continental League in “Bottom of the Ninth: Branch Rickey, Casey Stengel, and the Daring Scheme to Save Baseball From Itself.”
On Leonard Lopate June 9, 12:40 WYNC 820 AM, 939. FM
Posted: June 9th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Updates | No Comments »Appearing at Foley’s Monday, June 8 at noon
Posted: June 5th, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Updates | No Comments »
Prasie from blogger Chris Lynch
Posted: June 2nd, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Reviews, Updates | No Comments »The book was written focusing on two men – Branch Rickey and Casey Stengel much like Moneyball was written with a focus on Billy Beane and Bill James. If you enjoyed Moneyball you surely will enjoy Bottom of the Ninth. I can’t recommend it enough.
New York Times Book Review
Posted: June 1st, 2009 | Author: mshapiro | Filed under: Reviews, Updates | No Comments »“There’s something refreshing about a book in which the heroes both fail. Shapiro makes us feel their pain. He captures the sense of loss — not only for Rickey and Stengel, but for baseball and its fans. As Stengel once said, “Without losers, where would the winners be?”