AuthorWill, George F.
TitleBunts : Curt Flood, Camden Yards, Pete Rose, and other reflections on baseball / George F. Will.
PublishedNew York, NY : Scribner, c1998.
Description352 p. : ill. ; 25 cm.
ISBN0-684-83820-6
ISBN978-0-684-83820-5
General NoteIncludes brief selections, some of which were originally written for newspapers, magazines, and book review publications.
Includes index.
Formatted NotePartial Contents: The Cubs and conservatism -- The fan's funny sort of seriousness -- The most consoling word: "Overdue" -- Players are bought and sold? Say it ain't so -- Warren Buffett misses a gravy train -- The Chicago Water Beetles -- Alexander Cartwright and the joy of baseball -- The case for I.T. (ineptitude transfer) -- The 1980 Cubs' strength: candor -- The answer is: Ronald Reagan. The question is: who is the only person to have held America's two most difficult jobs? -- Baseball and socialism -- Baseball and communism -- The earl -- The pythagoras of Winchester, Kansas -- Ancient Greece got it right -- Speaking Stengelese -- Baseball in the unmitigated city -- Baseball by the (Elias) book -- The answer is Harry Chiti. The question is ... -- The nation's failings in the national pastime -- The work of Louisville's fathers -- Ring Lardner, call your office -- La Plata's cheerfulness quotient.

The DH: on the other hand ... -- Blue-collar government -- The fuse that lit the fire -- Perhaps the players are livelier -- Systems equilibrate. Really. -- Skill, and "mere" will -- "The moment's over" -- Let there be lights -- Good character, not good chemistry -- A mosaic of memories -- Play bail! -- Revenge of the ectomorphs -- Pete Rose's chromosomes -- Living on the lip of a volcano -- Pete Rose and his friends -- A professional catcher -- The 1990 lockout: no hits, many errors -- The prodigy -- George Steinbrenner: an acquired taste -- Baseball Lit. 101 -- Blame Burt Wilson -- George Will's baseball: a conservative critique, by Donald Kagan -- The romantic fallacy in baseball: a reply to Donald Kagan -- Chicago baseball: "never a lovely so real" -- Baseball along the backroads -- "I can't stand it, I'm so good" -- The season of '41 -- The collision between Bart and Pete -- Marvin Miller: sore winner -- Local ownership and other traditions -- Love at Camden Yards -- The lurid monotony of Billy Martin -- Steve Palermo's game of inches -- Baseball's basic dilemma.

Fifties baseball: not long on nuance -- Andy Van Slyke and the present monetary status of baseball -- Bill Rigney: baseball's favorite uncle -- Coming back to Clark and Addison -- John Olerud: Not neon -- A stupendous mystery -- Tony Gwynn, union man -- The 14 million, and the 276 million -- Babe Ruth, replacement player -- The strike: a postmortem -- A grown-up -- Brett Butler, human bunt -- The infield fly rule and the absence of chivalry -- A splash of history as a cure for nostalgia -- Hard feelings along the lower Hudson River -- Explaining the power surge: up from Oliver Stone -- Dred Scott in spikes -- Leyland in teal -- Alomar in context -- The argument against democracy -- Fans to owners: "down in front" -- Purists vs. impurists -- "Them are the bases" -- Miller time.
SubjectsBaseball -- Social aspects -- United States.
Baseball -- United States -- Anecdotes.
LC Card Number98-23500
Call Number/Copies 
 WRHS Research Library: GV 863 A1 W688
mq234980: LC class, closed stacks [status: NON-CIRCULATING]
[Record 141577]