Kudos for the book and the speaking gig, Terry! I'm sure it represents a TON of work, but also a labor of love. Tip o' the cap.
I'll be talking about my new book Saturday at Elliott Bay at 3 p.m. and Sunday at the RBI Club at Safeco at noon and at Third Place Books in Lake Forest Park at 5:30.
Here's a bit about the book:
Off Speed: Baseball, Pitching and the Art of Deception contains among other things a history of pitching, a history of personal fandom and a pitch-by-pitch breakdown of a single game – Felix Hernandez’s perfect game on August 15, 2012. Tracing the evolution of pitching and the pitcher’s art of deception, Off Speed tells the story of baseball’s 150-year hunt for new pitches. Using the framework of a single game (nine chapters, nine innings, nine pitches), it explores the history of every type of pitch, combining the folk wisdom of the players with the enormous wealth of new data brought to the sport by the growing legion of statisticians who are transforming many of the sport’s once sacred beliefs.
From the publisher: As a lifelong baseball fan, Terry McDermott approaches his subject with the love every fan brings to the park plus the expertise of a probing journalist, exploring with irrepressible enthusiasm and curiosity both the science and the romance of the game.”A wonderfully informative, exuberant, and entertaining book that explores the evolution and history of baseball pitching through the story of one “perfect” game.
From me: In truth, the book is a bit odder than that. It’s about one-third a history of the game, one-third a detailed examination of a single game – Felix Hernandez’s 2012 perfect game, and tucked in there somewhere a history of my personal fandom which means lots of Iowa, lots of fathers and sons and Seattle and Niehaus and all kinds of other stuff. These are, of course, all mixed together so you have to read the parts you didn’t know you’d like to get to the parts you did. Tricky, huh?
Early praise for Off Speed
George Vecsey says Off Speed is “a literate and knowing little gem.” McDermott’s description of his first big-league game “reminds me of a boy’s rambunctious bus pub crawl with Welsh elders in the classic Dylan Thomas short story ‘The Outing.’ ”
“No one passionate about America’s national pastime will leave these pages disappointed.” – Booklist starred review
“McDermott’s deeply felt portrayal of the men on the mound is informed by an awareness of how much of what they do takes place in their head.” – The Atlantic
“Off Speed is baseball magic. As soon as Terry McDermott set down thirteen deft definitions of pitches with which I happily began to quibble, then gave me Willie Stargell likening the attempt to hit Sandy Koufax to trying to drink coffee with a fork, I fell into a flow state that held to the last chapter.” —David James Duncan, author of The Brothers K
Off Speed is “entertaining and wistful. . . McDermott demystifies baseball, illustrating the game’s “secret beauty” from being built over a very long time.” – Publishers Weekly
“The narrative is filled with passion and insight into how the game’s measured pace can seem both out of touch with fast-paced contemporary life and a temporary corrective to that fast pace.” – Kirkus Review
“Providing both insight into the art of pitching and a memoir on the role of the game in the life of a baseball fan, this work will be enjoyed by all lovers of the sport.” – Library Journal
Comments
As a fan of Roger Angell & David Halberstam, I can see I'm going to love this book.
Hope you enjoy. Unfortunately, SSI denizens won't learn all that much since Doc has already told us everything! Still, might be entertaining.
but I already purchased it, and moved it to the top of my queue on Kindle.
Can't wait!
And look forward to getting my hands on a copy. Regarding that, I don't see any links for ordering or purchasing.
-Edit: then I scrolled down.
How would it be if we periodically excerpted 100 words with a link back to the purchase area? Or you could do so yourself once or twice a month. Would be a superb addition to the "columns" on SSI.
And was a little disappointed you didn't bio yourself for the Denizens, but I guess you're just too modest :- )
. . . everyone comments on my modesty all the time.
Excerpt away.
Can't wait to read it.
Man, how did you get David James Duncan to jump on board? The Brothers K and The River Why are two of my all-time favorites!!
How about this, if you need another endorsement for your cover?
"McDermott's prose is as delighful as a ballpark hot dog, his baseball and family tales as much of us as "Field of Dreams," and his breakdown of the history and particulars of individual pitches as spot on as a Maddux fastball---on the black, low and away." Some has been local politician
You guys are one-upping each other in the wit department.
. . . by Duncan's blurb, too. I feel the same way about his books as you do.
Terry,
Do I get a kickback on the dollar or two you make from my purchase? :)
Well, don't think of it as kickback, just think of it as the SSI discount!
Have a camping/flyfishing trip coming up in a month, your book will travel with me. If i can wait that long to read it, anyway.
Really looking forward to it!
And looking at the titles and subjects of your other three books, I've just one question: What are you doing hanging with we (baseball) happy few, we band of dysfunctional brothers?
Keith
Plus, baseball is about community. Finally figured that out and this here thing at SSI is a community, an unusually rich one except for the crazy right wing nuts falling off the trees. Plant some hickories, Doc.
Thanks to all for the kind words and if you're in Seattle this weekend, please come out to one of the readings and introduce yourself. Assuming, of course, that they let you out of the home for short periods of time.
If anyone is in San Francisco I'll be there tomorrow at Book Passages and at Powell's in Portland on Friday. Times and places at off-speed.com.
Thx.
We didn't pick the Gene Wilder avatar for nothing, you realize. Who else has been crazy enough to blog the Seattle Blinkin' Mariners for twenty years, I ask you. A little Sympathy For The Donald is not real challenging after that.
Wasting time being a baseball fan. I will read this book!!
Nice work. SSI has been the breeding ground for several authors. Does the book have any SSI shtick?
Pretty cool Terry. I wish I lived in Seattle to make one of your book signings.