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Keepers of the Game: When Baseball Beat was Best Job on Paper
Barnes and Noble
Keepers of the Game: When Baseball Beat was Best Job on Paper
Current price: $39.95
Barnes and Noble
Keepers of the Game: When Baseball Beat was Best Job on Paper
Current price: $39.95
Size: Hardcover
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There was a time when the most prestigious job on a major newspaper belonged to the baseball beat writer, who enjoyed unparalleled longevity and influence within his profession. Through a variety of events and circumstances--television, expansion, all-sports radio, lifestyle changes, and the Internet revolution--those days are long gone. The baseball beat writers endure, but jobs change, and they have faced new challenges.
Keepers of the Game
celebrates the last generation of baseball writers whose careers were rooted in Teletype machines, train travel, and ten-team leagues, and who wielded an influence and power within the game that are unimaginable today. Dennis D'Agostino brings together, for the first time, the personal histories of a group of journalists whose influence, power, and dedication to the game of baseball is part of a golden age of sports journalism that is now a thing of the past. Twenty-three vintage beat writers tell their own stories, with an individual chapter devoted to each writer. The interview subjects include nine winners of the Baseball Hall of Fame's J. G. Taylor Spink Award, the baseball writing profession's highest honor: Ross Newhan, Hal McCoy, Murray Chass, Peter Gammons, Bob Elliott, Rick Hummel, Tracy Ringolsby, Nick Peters, and Bill Madden.
They and their colleagues were the best of their breed, that last generation of writers who were the unquestioned gatekeepers of the national pastime. For decades, their words shaped the history of the game.
If you're a baseball fan or someone who dreamed of being a baseball writer, this book is for you.
DENNIS D'AGOSTINO
is the author of
Garden Glory: An Oral History of the New York Knicks
(2003) and coauthor of
Through a Blue Lens: The Brooklyn Dodger Photographs of Barney Stein, 1939-1957
(2007). Recognized by his peers in the sports community as one of its leading historians and as an accomplished author and practitioner of the oral history process, D'Agostino has been a working colleague for more than two decades of many of the writers spotlighted in
. He lives in Huntington Beach, California.
New York Times
columnist Dave Anderson (1929-2018) won the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for sports commentary. From 2000 through 2007, he held the coveted card number 1 as the longest-tenured active member of the Baseball Writers' Association of America (BBWAA).