cover image The Devil’s Snake Curve: A Fan’s Notes from Left Field

The Devil’s Snake Curve: A Fan’s Notes from Left Field

Josh Ostergaard. Coffee House, $15.95 (256p) ISBN 978-1-56689-345-9

In his highly entertaining and always enlightening “subjective retelling of the sport’s history,” Ostergaard takes a nonlinear approach to discussing the cultural importance of baseball, successfully combining historical and personal anecdotes, statistical facts, and famous myths and legends. His goal is to show “the ways in which baseball has been represented in the U.S., and how these representations can be understood in the context of American history.” He moves easily from the relationship between baseball and political thinking shared during the early 1960s by fierce enemies Fidel Castro and Allen Dulles, to the ways baseball managers and owners attempted to enforce rules about hair length and mustaches at the same time that those rules were being rejected in American culture in general. One of the most provocative sections details the eerie symmetry between Clark Griffith, whose Washington Senators had been “squashed” by the New York Yankees for 17 straight seasons, and Hemingway’s character Santiago in The Old Man and the Sea, whose words and actions Ostergaard convincingly argues are subtle commentaries about the baseball postseason and the World Series. [em](Apr.) [/em]