Roads to Redemption: A Guide to Major League Baseball
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #185127 in Books
- Published on: 2005-04-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher
With Roads To Redemption - A Guide To Major League Baseball we have merely helped the author to fill an enormous gap in the UK sports book market: the place where a baseball fan goes to get themselves informed about the American game. According to 5's erstwhile pundit Josh Chetwynd, who now resides in Arizona studying Law, this is the first mainstream work on the subject to come out of Britain since 1987. We thought this a pretty desperate state of affairs and we're only too happy to play some sort of part in correcting the situation. Over to Craig.
From the Author
The point of Roads To Redemption was for me to work on a book that would keep me in a place of permanent pleasure and enlightenment. To be able to write is always a delight. To be able to use that situation to learn about the substance of a new hobby was wonderful. When I had finished writing for the day, family chores allowing, I would go read a book about the subject or watch a tape of a game. It isn't what I'd always defined as work, I can tell you that.
And obviously, here was a mission for some writer other to set off on: to put out a book on baseball and be British at the same time. The idea that fans of the game could go into major bookstores in the UK in big provincial towns and find nothing on the shelves about it - and I did this many times before I gave up in disgust - was so ridiculous that whilst the Florida Marlins were beating the Yankees in the (October) 2003 World Series I decided that it was my fate to walk down that road to publication unless someone got there first.
The only difficulties were twofold: firstly, I had to lose a chapter out of the book because the Boston Red Sox went and won the World Series. This being one of the most important events to have taken place in all of sport since the turn of the Millenium, in my humbly opinionated state of mind, I had to write about it for the book; it would have been ridiculous to have done otherwise. Crash! went a chapter about my trip to the States in April 2004 to Boston, New York and Cooperstown. For this reason, the book for me is unfinished (is an author ever satisfield with his/her work? I doubt it). So, I watch the sales situation here in the late Spring, knowing that if the book does well enough I'm going to produce an updated and re-organised work on the same subject for the Spring of 2006. The second problem is that - and I daresay that again, a lot, if not all writers say this: the finished Roads, for all that I think it is readable and useable, and I hope enjoyable in parts, I can see glitches and wrinkles in the thing. Hey, it's my baby we're talking about here. I nurtured the thing from nothing. I watched it grow in embryonic form and eventually introduced it into the world. I've bashed it, shaped it and controlled it, while it has bitten me, teased me and kept me awake nights. While all this was going on, time passed by quickly. In the headlong rush of days towards an April 1 2005 release date, rough spots that should have been carefully burred remained in tact. Damn! I need that 2006 version to bring it all back home again in perfect shape. Of course, I'll fail, but that's the writer's dream.
From the Inside Flap
"From Barry Bonds to back-door sliders, Tigers and Mets to tappers and mitts, this is a rich, readable and staggeringly detailed guide to the teams and terminology of Major League Baseball."
Andrew Shields, Time Out.
"I feel sure people will jump at it when they here about it...a book of this nature aimed primarily for the UK market has been way too long in the making."
Gary Roberts, Great Britain Baseball Team website.
"High quality…a lovingly produced guide to America's greatest sport - will appeal to confirmed fans and newcomers alike"
Alan English, Sunday Times.
"Very impressive. The pictures are excellent and the production quality is high. I love the glossary and the book reviews. It’s exciting to have a book of this quality written by a local and available to British audience."
David Lengel, Baseball On 5.
Customer Reviews
Very funny, very useful
I wish this book had been available a year ago, because that was when I began to get interested in baseball as a spill-over from a cricket obession, and after reading Ed Smith's Playing Hard Ball (English cricketer who trained with a Major League Baseball team).
For the UK baseball novice it is hard to get started. I bought a small, under-explained (and overpriced) book of rules; and started video-ing Channel 5 baseball (which is broadcast once or twice a week, in the middle of the night) - and got hooked.
In order to find out even the basics of the sport, I've spent a fair bit on books, and lot of time on the internet (Wikipedia has plenty of information). But all the books and web articles assume a basic level of knowledge impossible to the English fan - especially concerning the abundant jargon and slang, basic history, great players, notorious events etc.
Along comes Craig W Thomas who has produced the perfect solution to this problem of bridging the UK-US gap with Roads to Redemption - especially with his superb (and superbly opinionated) Dictionary of Baseball which makes up the second-third of this book. There is also a concise 'history' of the sport full of amusing asides. There is stuff about the great players, team profiles and more. So all the necessary facts are packed-in.
The only significant (albeit minor) problem with the book is the proof-reading - there are large numbers of minor 'typographical' errors, and mistakes in spelling, headings etc. This is inevitable with big and complex books published by tiny publishers to a tight deadline. But the book looks very good, is well illustrated, and handles well - so the publishers deserve overall congratulation - and if R to R runs into second and further updated editions (as it deserves to) then these minor niggles can be corrected.
But - useful facts aside - the special appeal of this book comes from the fact that Thomas is such a good writer. He is an enthusiast, prone to enjoyable set-piece mini-rants (of endorsement and of irritation), on topics both likely and unlikely (eg. he loves both the Boston Red Sox and baseball poems) - with a line in witty, self-deprecating honesty honed in the school of soccer fanzines.
Indeed, the style of humour makes this this is a very English book about a very American sport. Roads to Redemption is more than just an 'introduction': it has new things to say and a new voice to say them.
Baseball Arrives.
There are not too many Baseball books around that have the UK fan in mind so I was very pleased to hear about "Roads To Redemption", the author is a UK based RedSox fan and this is the basis for the book.
As a relatively new fan of Baseball the Author describes various situations that all UK fans of the game will be familiar with. Refferences to the deeds of players from another age and such like. he then does his best to try and explain some of it from a fans point of view.
The book has lots of very useful stats and information ideal for newish recruits to the twilight world of UK MLB fandom, as well as these technical sections there is some very good stuff about the FIVE baseball show (which was the catalyst for many of us to really get into the game) including some insight into the characters of the people who bring us the show twice a week throughout the season and on the authors own experiences as a RedSox fan during their historic 2004 World Series season, naturaly this features quite prominently as does as a season long review of 2004 and a look at the history of the game from the early years of Cobb, Young & Ruth etc.
All in all a very worthwhile effort and a book that would be very usefull to UK Baseball fans both for the technical content and as an entertaining read. It's not perfect but it is a big step beyond the usual "Baseball For Dummies" type offering that we tend to find on our bookshelves, read it and judge for yourselves.
A must for novice ball fans
Ok, so i bought this book late. I only found it through an Amazon search but what a find.
I found this book ideal for the baseball fan who didn't grow up with that particular sport on their national curriculum. Starts with the basics but does so much more. I like my Sunday and Wednesday baseball on five, even more so now I know what the hell they are talking about. Batting averages, RBI's, a double play, wild card play off, bunt, what are you guys talking about?. Well, now I know. The rules and details are explained in a very unique and affective way....alphabetically. Every possible term, rule, statistic type, abbreviation and odd Americanism you could ever hear during a commentary are covered.
Not only that but there is a full and detailed info run down of all the Major League teams, a history of the sport, recommended further reading etc... And the best bit of all... it's written with a typically British, dry sense of humour that will appeal to the non-Americans among us. Very funny and informative if you want to know about the worlds second best sport in a way that you can understand.





