SportsBusiness Daily — Sports Business Resources — your sports business news and information source. Learn More
Advanced
Home About Us Advertise With Us Marketplace/Classifieds College & University Program Subscribe/Trial My Account

Tuesday
October 24, 2006
Print This Issue


 
MOST VIEWED STORIES
View the top 20 stories
 
Recent Issues
Sports Media

Book Shelf: “Driving With The Devil,” Three Baseball Reads

Thompson’s Book Examines
Roots Of Stock Car Racing



NBC “Nightly News” anchor Brian Williams reviewed Neal Thompson’s “Driving With the Devil,” which looks at the roots of stock car racing. Williams: “The story is filled with dramatic scenes and re-created conversations that would defy fact-checking — Mr. Thompson has carved out a rather narrow field in which to work by concentrating on the period from 1938 to 1952. Given that the popularity of stock-car racing exploded in the half-century since then, the book’s focus on a formative period would seem to make it of interest to a rather specialized audience.” In its “roughest patches, ‘Driving With the Devil’ is slow-going indeed. At its best, it’s a thoroughly researched account of a ‘simpler time’” (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 10/21).

WORLDLY MATTERS: The FINANCIAL TIMES’ Christopher Bowe reviewed Mark Lamster’s “Spalding’s World Tour: The Epic Adventure That Took Baseball Around the Globe — and Made It America’s Game,” and Alan Klein’s “Growing the Game: The Globalization of Major League Baseball.” Bowe wrote the books “look at the sport’s attempts to sell itself outside the U.S. in very different eras.” The latter “reads unfortunately like a corporate consultant’s report on unsuccessful efforts to build baseball internationally” (FINANCIAL TIMES, 10/21).

FLOOD WATCH: Russ Smith of the N.Y. Press and City Paper of Baltimore reviewed “A Well-Paid Slave” by Brad Snyder, which profiles late MLBer Curt Flood, whose legal challenges led to free agency in baseball. Smith writes the book is “hardly hagiography. Fans of a certain age who do recall Flood’s legal travails, as well as his noteworthy career, will be surprised and saddened to read of his alcoholism, constant philandering and financial disasters. Even his secondary career as a portrait painter ... turns out to have been a fraud.” The book is “an absorbing — and long overdue — look at Curt Flood’s life and influence. Blemishes and all, he deserves daily thanks from the multimillionaires who now fill stadiums across the country” (WALL STREET JOURNAL, 10/21).


Get A Free Trial To SportsBusiness Daily

Reader Comments

To post comments on this article, log in or register for a free trial.

Related Stories By Company Related Stories By Sport
NASCAR Sponsors Becoming More Diverse
March 18, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Carl Edwards Only Gets Probation For Wreck
March 10, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

U.S. Census Sports Advertising Discussed
March 10, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

NASCAR Sponsorships Holding Steady
March 5, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Crowd On Sunday May Impact AMS' Cup Future
March 5, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Longoria To Appear In National New Era Ad
March 19, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Cactus League Bill Passes Arizona House
March 19, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Brewers Asked To Help With Miller Park Debt
March 19, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Cubs Near Deal For Toyota Sign At Wrigley
March 18, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

Rangers React To Manager's Cocaine Use
March 18, 2010 : SportsBusiness Daily

ALSO IN THIS SECTION


A Publication of Street & Smith's Sports Group.
Use of and/or registration on any portion of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement (REVISED 2009-06-23) and Privacy Policy (REVISED 2009-06-23).

© 2010 Street & Smith's Sports Group and its licensors. All rights reserved.
The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Street & Smith's Sports Group.