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Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Thomas Boswell, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

9+ oeuvres 715 utilisateurs 6 critiques 1 Favoris

Critiques

One of my favourite sports books. It is really only a collection of essays on baseball, but all are engaging and, often insightful.
1 voter
Signalé
JJPCIII | 2 autres critiques | Dec 30, 2023 |
It's a collection of older columns and stories from the late 70's and early 80's, and since Boswell wrote for the Washington Post at the time, a lot of Earl Weaver/Orioles content. This works more for me than maybe those who are interested in other teams, although a handful of stories about life in the minors work for anyone interested in the day to day workings of a player working through the first days of rookie ball or the big league star coaching in a place like Spokane.
 
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Brio95 | 1 autre critique | May 31, 2023 |
A series of essays by Washington Post sports columnist Tom Boswell, first published in 1982. Of most interest to older lovers of baseball, obviously
 
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ParadisePorch | 1 autre critique | Dec 21, 2020 |
Boswell is an excellent sportswriter on the topic of baseball, This book is from the early 80's. I haven't been following baseball in this century; wonder what his thoughts are now regarding the game in the light of performance enhancing drugs, and on the sportswriting profession in the age of ESPN, sports blogs, and social media.
 
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featherbear | 2 autres critiques | May 30, 2015 |
Thomas Boswell is a veteran writer for the Washington Post whom I never would have heard of if it hadn't been for a friend of mine. Despite the fact that he will only read an actual book if it's not available on the Kindle, he happens to be one of the only people I know in person who reads anywhere close to what I read in a year (and he claims it's only one fifth of what I read). So, every now and then I'll ask him what he's reading, and a month and a half ago, this was it - or at least, I'm about 80% sure I got the author right.

Anyway, what I meant to say was I wouldn't normally pick up a book of collected sports columns, especially when it talks about sports I don't watch and events that happened before I was born. Boswell covers football, basketball, boxing, golf, the Olympics, tennis, and baseball. I watch the first and the last three, so of course found those the most interesting, while the middle dragged a little for me. But my friend described this as a book about various sports that had the most words he'd ever have to look up in the dictionary. I admit that was the selling point for me; I am a sucker for learning new words. Though I spent the first 100 or so pages wondering what he was talking about, in the remaining pages I wrote down a dozen or so to look up, from words I'd never read before, such as ectomorph (an individual with a slender, lean body, a slight build), to words I didn't know specific to a sport, such as a dogleg in golf (crooked or bent like a dog's hind leg as in "a sharp dogleg bend in the fairway"). What my friend didn't tell me was the Boswell has a bit of a philosophical bent, too, from ruminating on the way in which talking about sports has become the American way of talking about deep thoughts of morals and politics when it just appears to be about "only a game," to his sounding off on our tendency to demonize athletes when they make a mistake. He references classical mythology, John Updike, Moby-Dick, and Emily Dickinson (actually, he didn't just reference her, he had two of her poems in one article).

I had a mixed reaction overall. When I was reading about the sports I didn't really care about, I found myself characterizing the book as something that my friend was interested in professionally (he's a local sportswriter himself), and not something that I could see appealing to the general public. I almost put the book down multiple times - I like sports, but 300+ pages of sports columns is quite a commitment. But about two thirds of the way into the book, I started 1. finding more new words and 2. settled into a rhythm where I found myself enjoying the smart references and vivid descriptions. And, the truth is, once I got to the Olympics, I was back in sports I was interested in. Would I recommend it? Not for the casual fan. But if you follow a variety of sports, know your 1970s to 90s sports history, or are interested in sports journalism in general, then yes, this was an engaging, smart collection that you may find thought-provoking.
 
Signalé
bell7 | Oct 24, 2012 |
why time begins on opening day: An ecellent reading for anyone who does or has enjoyed the national passtime. Boswell records many hillarious insigts, all framed within the scope of the always unpredictable game. You will truly enjoy it!
 
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iayork | 2 autres critiques | Aug 9, 2009 |