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The New York Mets: Ethnography, Myth, and Subtext
 
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The New York Mets: Ethnography, Myth, and Subtext [Paperback]

Richard Grossinger (Author), Mike Vacarro (Foreword)
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 21, 2007
No baseball team has captured America’s imagination like the Mets. Alternately the “Lovable Losers” and the “Miracle Mets,” New York’s other team offers fascinating fodder for writer Richard Grossinger in this thoughtful collection. The New York Mets is a series of probing essays on the best and most interesting years of the team, particularly 1969, 1973, 1986, and last year’s abbreviated run. A pivotal essay chronicles the lives of a professional athlete and a die-hard fan to create a well-argued, deeply felt meditation on the ways in which franchise baseball has come to fail not only the fans but the players.

This centerpiece presents a poignant narrative of Mets pitcher Terry Leach and author Grossinger’s own experiences playing and tracking the sport. Taken together, these powerful essays alternately take the poet’s, the alchemist’s, and the player’s perspective to paint a composite portrait that brings all the stunning highs and dispiriting lows together to show the ways in which America’s favorite pastime has changed. Grossinger reflects on the salad days when teams were happily homegrown and laments the current money-ball scenario some call baseball today.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Grossinger summons the deep continuum, backward from Endy’s catch throughout the innermost heart’s secret Mets—Melvin Mora, Terry Leach, Wayne Garrett, and beyond. He speaks to and for the True Believeniks, those of us always searching for the door into summer.”
—Jonathan Lethem

“You want fun? Well, root for the Mets and read this wonderful book and realize that you’re part of a legacy that will live long after we suffer, linger, and die over West Coast games and four-game losing streaks and leaky bullpens. Enjoy.”
—Mike Vaccaro, New York Post sports columnist

“For those of us who were there from the beginning, it’s been forty-five years now, close to half a century of bewilderment, frustration, and unlikely miracles. The amazing Metropolitans of New York. Richard Grossinger gets the story of the team just right. He is a philosopher of the game, the world’s first baseball mystic.”
—Paul Auster

"Grossinger’s thorough knowledge of Mets history is complemented by his understanding of the ethnographer’s art. He writes with a flair and authenticity that encourages further reading, and I found it easy to cross the finish line. He’s an engaging writer, and the depth of his passion for the early Mets is worthy of attention."
—NINE Journal

About the Author

Richard Grossinger is an anthropologist and publisher who has authored or edited over twenty books, including five anthologies of baseball literature. Grossinger and Lisa Conrad co-edited Baseball I Gave You the Best Years of My Life, the first anthology of its kind, and one that includes work from contributors as diverse as Don Hall, Jack Kerouac, and Jack Spicer. Baseball Diamonds and Into the Temple of Baseball followed, both edited by Grossinger and Kevin Kerrane. For over thirty years, Grossinger and his wife, Lindy Hough, have run North Atlantic Books.

Mike Vaccaro has been the lead sports columnist at the New York Post since 1992, after previously working at the Newark Star-Ledger, the Kansas City Star, and at newspapers in upstate New York and Arkansas. He is the author of Emperors and Idiots, the definitive history of the Yankees-Red Sox rivalry, and 1941: The Greatest Year in Sports, which will be published in May 2007. The winner of over 150 journalism awards since 1989, he is a graduate of St. Bonaventure University and lives in Hillsdale, NJ with his wife, Leigh.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Frog Books (August 21, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 158394205X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1583942055
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 1 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,245,816 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Not a Book for Literally-minded Baseball Fans, July 10, 2009
This review is from: The New York Mets: Ethnography, Myth, and Subtext (Paperback)
This book is a personal meditation on baseball and, as such, includes digressions, flights of fancy, and mythical representations of the sport. In his prefatory note, the author says: "...I wanted to capture the whole sweep of Mets history, so I went through my old experimental-prose volumes and unpublished writings and located several fragments about the 1962, 1969, 1971, 1973, and 1975-1977 Mets. ... I retained the style of their time, including sentence fragments, nonparallel clauses, and the alternative spelling "thru.""

Yes, as a previous reviewer points out, the book incorrectly gives the date of Willie Mays' famous over-the shoulder catch as 1951 (a typographical error, I imagine), but it is described in greater detail later in the text, giving the accurate date of 1954. But a focus on such minutiae misses the point. The book is not about the literal; it is a work of the imagination.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliantly written, April 5, 2011
This review is from: The New York Mets: Ethnography, Myth, and Subtext (Paperback)
An often brilliantly written recollection of the author's life as a baseball fan and sometimes player, particularly noted for his keen one-line opinion of various Mets' players. He does mention some facts never known to this life-long Mets' fan such as Davey Johnson's recommendation to Frank Cashen that the Mets take Texas League pitcher Orel Hershiser in the rule 5 draft.

What this book clearly is not is a history or in-depth profile of the Mets. The one player who rates more than a chapter is not Dwight Gooden, Darrell Strawberry, Mike Piazza, or even Ed Kranepool (all of whom barely get a mention), but rather Terry Leach whose unexpected major league success is meant to point out how scouts and GM's value results much less than "tools".

Yes, there are misprints and probably some clouded remembrances, but if you are a longtime Mets' fan who wants to supplement your reading with something unique that celebrates the fascination with the game rather than statistics or history, I would highly recommend this book.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Cover is misleading, April 1, 2009
This review is from: The New York Mets: Ethnography, Myth, and Subtext (Paperback)
I purchased the book at my local book store with high hopes. Initially the photo of Endy's catch caught my attention. (One of the greatest moments at Shea eventhough the Mets lost the game!). I read the index and saw that the book was not just dedicated to the 2006 season, which appealed to me.

However, when I began reading, I felt no connection to the author or the text. There were several inconsistencies and I immediately lost interest. The writing was choppy and boring.

I tried skipping to other chapters, and was equally disappointed. Even if you are a hard core mets fan, stay away from this book.
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