Joy of Keeping Score
Paul Dickson. Walker & Company, $17.95 (160pp) ISBN 978-0-8027-1307-0
Scorekeeping in baseball was inaugurated nationally in 1863 by Henry Chadwick, who also invented the box score. Dickson (Baseball's Greatest Quotations) here teaches the rudiments of scoring, including how the players are numbered, some of the obvious symbols (e.g., SB is a Stolen Base) and some of the less obvious (K is the universal mark for the Strikeout). He explains the nuances of scoring a ball game and how to read a box score, and profiles some of the celebrities who liked to score games (Dwight D. Eisenhower and Mrs. Calvin Coolidge, among others). We also see how it's done north of the border, from a Montreal Expos scorecard (a home run is un circuit); how the hot dog was invented; and how FDR introduced baseball lingo into politics. Dickson has written a testimonial to the joys of scoring that true ball fans will embrace. Photos. (June)
Details
Reviewed on: 06/03/1996
Genre: Nonfiction
Hardcover - 117 pages - 978-0-8027-1570-8
Open Ebook - 128 pages - 978-0-8027-1871-6
Paperback - 978-0-614-27664-0
Paperback - 128 pages - 978-0-15-600516-6