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Loading... Nine Innings (1985)by Daniel Okrent
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I came to Brewers fandom in the late 1980s, thus missing the total importance of the 1982 season to the older fans. I really wish I had found out about the existence of this book before 2008. It really helped me understand a lot of things about the organization that appear to persist to this day, despite the team being under different ownership and the front office completely turning over. (Well, Yost and Simmons persisted until 9/15/08--finding out about them in 1982 also explains some things about 2008.) no reviews | add a review
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You'll never watch baseball the same way again. A timeless baseball classic and a must read for any fan worthy of the name, Nine Innings dissects a single baseball game played in June 1982 -- inning by inning, play by play. Daniel Okrent, a seasoned writer and lifelong fan, chose as his subject a Milwaukee BrewersBaltimore Orioles matchup, though it could have been any game, because, as Okrent reveals, the essence of baseball, no matter where or when it's played, has been and will always be the same. In this particular moment of baseball history you will discover myriad aspects of the sport that are crucial to its nature but so often invisible to the fans -- the hidden language of catchers' signals, the physiology of pitching, the balance sheet of a club owner, the gait of a player stepping up to the plate. With the purity of heart and unwavering attention to detail that characterize our national pastime, Okrent goes straight to the core of the world's greatest game. You'll never watch baseball the same way again. No library descriptions found. |
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Okrent’s concept is fascinating: Reveal the full extent to which even a “routine” and “ordinary” ball game is complex, and rooted in the history of the series, the season, prior seasons, and the larger history of baseball. There have been in-depth studies of particular seasons (Cait Murphy’s Crazy ‘08) and series (Buzz Bissinger’s Three Nights in August , and minute studies of the subtleties of the game (George Will’s Men at Work), but there is, to the best of my knowledge, nothing else like Nine Innnings in the vast literature of baseball. That Okrent has filled that gap is, all by itself, praiseworthy.
The fact that the book is unique means, however, that it’s hard to gauge whether any given reader is going to like it . . . or want to read the entire thing. There’s no way to say, reliably, “If you liked X, you’ll like Nine Innings because there’s no title that could be substituted for X. I’ve read more than my share of tightly focused baseball books . . . but ran out of steam somewhere in the fourth inning of this one, even as I admired Okrent’s research and narrative craftsmanship.
Make no mistake: This “inside baseball” at its most inside. There’s no structure beyond that imposed by the rhythms of the game itself, no central character (like Tony LaRussa in Three Nights in August, and no dramatic climax (like the pennant-deciding Red Sox-Yankees playoff game in David Halberstam’s The Summer of ‘49) to which the narrative builds. Truly loving (and, likely finishing) this book requires relishing the details for their own sake. Even if your thirst for inside baseball has limits, however, Nine Innings is worth dipping into, at least for a few at-bats. ( )