In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Contributors

Frank Ardolino is a professor of English at the University of Hawaii.

Gustavo Adolfo Aybar is a graduate student at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, studying Romance Languages and Literature. A member of the Latino Writer's Collective, his work can be read in their anthology Primera Pagina: Poetry from the Latino Heartland (Scapegoat Press). He is also a poet in residence for Present Magazine, presentmagazine.com

Ron Briley is a history teacher and assistant headmaster at Sandia Preparatory School in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He is the author of Class at Bat, Gender on Deck and Race in the Hole (McFarland, 2003) and editor of The Politics of Baseball: Essays on the Pastime and Power at Home and Abroad (McFarland, 2010).

John Paul Hill is a part-time instructor at the University of Georgia. His dissertation examined A. B. "Happy" Chandler's views on civil rights.

Andy Mele grew up in Brooklyn. He is the author of A Brooklyn Dodgers Reader and The Boys of Brooklyn. He writes for the Staten Island Advance and The Italian Tribune. Andy now resides in Staten Island, New York.

Robert A. Moss is Research Professor and Louis P. Hammett Professor of Chemistry Emeritus at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey.After fifty-two years, he is resigned to the loss of the Brooklyn Dodgers, but he is not content with the New York Mets.

Jeff Obermeyer earned his Master of Arts in Military History from Norwich University in June 2009. An expanded version of "War Games" served as his capstone paper. During the off-season he also researches hockey, and his book Hockey in Seattle was published in 2004. [End Page 165]

Steve Steinberg has collaborated with Lyle Spatz on 1921: The Yankees, the Giants, and the Battle for Baseball Supremacy in New York (University of Nebraska Press, 2010). He is also finishing a creative work on Urban Shocker and writing the Dave Danforth biography for SABR's BioProject.

Steve Treder has been a writer for The Hardball Times since its founding in 2004. His work has also been featured in NINE, The National Pastime, and other publications. He lives in Santa Clara, California.

Justin Turner teaches history at J. Sargeant Reynolds Community College in Richmond, Virginia. He is currently completing his dissertation on U.S.-Cuba baseball diplomacy.

Earl J. Wilcox's poetry has appeared in The Centrifugal Eye, Word Riot, Charlotte Writers' Club anthologies, Arabesques Review, The Wild Goose Poetry Review, and many other places. He has been an avid St. Louis Cards fan for more than seventy years, and his poetry can be seen on his blog, Writing by Earl. [End Page 166]

...

pdf

Share