Product Details
Smithsonian Baseball: Inside the World's Finest Private Collections

Smithsonian Baseball: Inside the World's Finest Private Collections
By Stephen Wong

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Product Description

An oversized volume showcases 350 full-color photographs of twenty-one of the best private collections of baseball memorabilia, featuring numerous historical and previously unseen artifacts and providing eight expert essays on how to build a personal collection. 60,000 first printing.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #140900 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-10-01
  • Released on: 2005-09-27
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 296 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Readers who want to see Mickey Mantle's uniform from the 1968 season, Mark McGwire's 70th home run ball from 1998, or a Satchel Paige autographed glove will find them among scores of treasures in this oversized book, vividly illustrated with color photographs of the most exceptional private baseball memorabilia collections, many of which contain items that have not been seen in public for decades. More than simple eye candy for the baseball fetishist, the book includes thoughtful essays that delve into collectors' backgrounds, introducing the reader to an array of people, their quirks and their motivations for collecting. Some of the collectors are well known: one chapter is devoted to the collection of Todd McFarlane, creator of the comic book character Spawn; another displays the baseball folk art collection of Penny Marshall-Laverne of Laverne and Shirley and the director of the baseball movie, A League of Their Own. Others are more ordinary people who have been blessed with the dedication and means to take their passion for baseball to an extraordinary level. Wong, a lawyer and baseball historian, places the artifacts in social and historic context as he conveys the arcane but captivating knowledge gathered by these collectors, who are authorities on obscure details like the model numbers of bats. This book is fine companion for baseball enthusiasts looking for something to tide them over during those long winter days between the World Series and spring training.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
*Starred Review* This sumptuous volume offers an irresistible entree into what must be one of the richest private collections of baseball memorabilia in the world. Although the chapters are arranged by collector, they fall neatly into categories reflecting those collectors' specific areas of interest, such as baseball cards, equipment, uniforms, advertisements, "pin-backs," autographs, and stadium mementos. Many of the story lines are explicit, such as baseball's evolution since the mid-1800s, or the game's strong association with pop culture. Other story lines are less obvious but just as telling, such as baseball's (and society's) more careless tolerance of pain: nineteenth-century baseball played without helmets, rules that allowed teams to record outs by hitting the runner with the baseball (known as soaking), and mitts so unpadded as to pass for driving gloves. And there are nice little touches, like the close-up photos of nine World Series rings, or the sepia image of a touring, 1888-89 American baseball team standing at various points atop the Sphinx. The collections are beautifully photographed and laid out on the page, and the text and captions--once past Wong's obligatory paean to his own youthful attachment to baseball--complement the illustrations well. A godsend for baseball geeks everywhere. Bill Ott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"...a magnificent album of baseball mementos--by turns, beautiful, peculiar and hilarious." (Sports Illustrated )

"A godsend for baseball geeks everywhere." (Booklist Starred Review )


Customer Reviews

The Ultimate Coffee-Table Book5
This beautiful book belongs in every baseball enthusiast's library, but it would be a mistake to keep it on the shelves. Author Stephen Wong has partnered with the Smithsonian to publish the most stunning book on baseball on the market. It deserves to be on your coffee table not only because of its wonderful photographs but also due to the wonderfully rich way he presents the history of the game. Wong gained remarkable access to the sport's foremost collectors, combing through hundreds of images and memorabilia items. The payoff is tremendous for anyone with an interest in baseball or, for that matter, in American history and culture. Readers will learn the essential facts about the game, and the fascinating tidbits, such as the origins of the curve ball. They then get to see remarkable shots, some most unusual - from folk art statues to Don Larsen's enshrined shoes from his perfect game to the bricks of former stadiums. In fact, this book should be placed in the Hall of Fame!

A unique and wonderful baseball book 5
This is a wonderful baseball book. It captures the entire sweep of our national pastime's history through the description and display of the best (and undoubtedly the most valuable!) private collections of baseball memorabilia. The collectors themselves are a varied lot, from a Wall Street exec to a famous Hollywood celebrity, and each has built up a remarkable collection of some of the rarest, most historically significant baseball memorabilia in existence. This book is a lot more than baseball cards and home run balls, although there is plenty of that. The various collections include amazing original photographs, and the bats, gloves, and uniforms of all the baseball greats, plus lots of unexpected gems like board games, old posters and advertisements, and even folk art fashioned from baseball odds and ends. The photos are accompanied by excellent captions that are very informative, sometimes funny and sometimes heartbreaking, like the game itself. In this book, done to the Smithsonian's usual high standards, the baseball greats of yesteryear seem to come alive and stride the basepaths once again. It almost seems like you can reach out and touch Ty Cobb's bat, or feel the texture of Ted Williams' uniform, or hear the roar of the crowds at The Polo Grounds. Anyone with an interest in baseball will thoroughly enjoy this book, and I heartily recommend it.

Baseball History Told Through Amazing Memorabelia Collections5
Stephen Wong's Simthsonian Baseball: Inside the World's Finest Private Collections is that rare baseball book that, similar to titles like The Summer of 1949, Collision At Home Plate and The Boys of Summer, that reminds fans of the game why they became fans in the first place and has the ability to inspire a new generation of baseball devotees.

The baseball fan will not be able to put this book down. The artifacts in the featured collections are immediately recognizable and the collections taken as a whole, are superior to what can be found in Cooperstown. The stunning photography and the collection-specific essays literally bring the pieces to life.

The casual fan, and even the non-fan who opens this book will know the significance of names like, Ruth, Robinson and Aaron. The collections and their stories will do the rest.

The collections are thematic -- celluloid buttons, advertizing, homerun balls, photos, teammates, etc -- which allows this book to be as much a story about the history and culture of America as about the game of baseball. Stephen Wong's narrative has the quality and tone of a conversation with an old friend about great games, great moments and great players: shared experiences that connect our lives.

To be fair, most readers of this book will not have the resources to collect baseball memorabelia of this quality. Yes, these collections are private rather then on public display. Hopefully the Smithsonian can work with these and other collectors to arrange a more public presentation. The bottom line though, is that these collectors have chosen to accumulate artifacts of the game they love, becoming stewards of history in the process, rather than cars, boats, or whatever else people with similar means might choose to spend their money on.

Buy this book. First, give it to anyone you know who really loves baseball. Then, sit down and flip through the pages with your kids. You'll end up talking as much about yourself, your childhood memories and heroes, and maybe a similar conversation you had with your grandfather, as you will about baseball. That's the magic of the game of baseball: the ability to connect generations through a child's eyes. And that's the magic of this book.