Summer reading specials

Check off some books on your summer reading list and save! Choose a title from the outdoor adventures category like Yellowstone, Land of Wonders by Jules Leclercq. If you can’t go to Yellowstone this summer experience the park the way this Belgian travel writer did in 1883 when he spent ten days on horseback in Yellowstone, the world’s first national park. Or pick one of the memoirs to inspire inward reflection. The Days Are Gods by Liz Stephens takes you on her journey as she relocates from L.A. to Utah and shares her expertise on being an outsider. See full list here. Offer … Continue reading Summer reading specials

From the desk of David George Surdam


DavidSurdamDavid George Surdam is an associate professor of economics at the University of Northern Iowa. He is the author of
Wins, Losses, and Empty Seats, The Postwar Yankees and forthcoming Run to Glory and Profits: The Economic Rise of the NFL during the 1950s.

How
did I end up writing about the NFL? To borrow a line from Howard Cosell, “I
never played the game.” As a scrawny, bookish kid who could not throw or catch
a football with proficiency, I was not a prime candidate for the school team. I
also did not enjoy being hollered at. My parents prohibited me from playing,
both from fear of injury and from a dislike of the game. Still, the high school
football coach encouraged me to play, but to this day, I don’t know why. He
knew I couldn’t perform any of the fundamentals of the game; perhaps he wanted
me to raise the team’s grade point average.

I did, however, play Strat-O-Matic Baseball
and Football. I had long been interested in baseball history, having read
Harold Seymour’s Baseball. I can
still remember reading about baseball’s triumvirate, but mostly there were the
numbers. I can remember the day browsing in a local library when I chanced upon
the new Macmillan Baseball Encyclopedia.
Sheer delight—page after page of statistics.
Strat-O-Matic creator Harold Richman did a wonderful job transforming
statistics into a game. While I mostly played the baseball game, the football
version was actually more fun. There were more tactical decisions to make, and
of course, you could compile copious statistics.

As a senior in the Robert D. Clark Honors College at
the University of Oregon, I used regression analysis to explain baseball run
production—slugging average and on-base
percentage were paramount. While I attended graduate school and started my
academic career, though, my interest in baseball and football was quiescent.
One of my friends and mentors at Loyola University of Chicago suggested that I
diversify my research. I had pretty much said all I wanted to about the
economics of the American Civil War. Researching sports was an obvious choice
for me.

Continue reading “From the desk of David George Surdam”

The Marketeers Club: Need for the Bike

9780803269095The one hundredth Tour de France started Saturday,
June 29. Each summer for the past fifteen or so years, I anticipate the guilty
pleasure of sitting on the couch in a climate-controlled house—watching as the
Tour riders gut it out in a range of weather conditions on their epic journey
to Paris. The three-week, twenty-one-stage race packs in a surprising amount of
human drama as the ever-shifting alliances and tactics play themselves out
against the backdrop of long-standing rivalries.

The riders endure desperate ascents, thrilling and
terrifying descents, daring breakaways, heartbreaking crashes, injuries, and
sickness. They do this within reach of hundreds of thousands of fans who line
the course—mostly adoring, often drunk, and at times dangerously hapless. The
race finally ends on the cobblestones of Paris with a mad sprint for the final-stage
victory.

When the Tour riders cross the finish line in
mid-July, they will have covered 3,479
kilometers, averaging something like one
hundred miles per day for three weeks, much of it in the
mountains, with just two rest days. Their will to undergo the necessary
suffering, with or without doping, never ceases to amaze me. The glory of a Tour
rider’s triumph, however, is often eclipsed
by the shadow of doping. Although doping has possibly existed (in more
rudimentary forms) as long as racing itself, its modern pervasiveness is frustrating
and confounding. With darkness threatening to overshadow cycling’s most iconic
race, I return to a book that I love because it celebrates the bike as a thing
of beauty and a renewable source of joy.

The book is Frenchman Paul Fournel’s compact and understated
gem Need for the Bike, translated and introduced by Allan Stoekl and published
in 2003. Fournel has had a career in publishing and is a longtime member of the
Oulipo literary collective. His wonderful writing and his deep and abiding love
of the bike are both antidotes to despair. I cannot resist quoting from Fournel,
but you will soon understand why: 

Continue reading “The Marketeers Club: Need for the Bike”

Doc Martyn’s Soul: A Month in New York – Or so it Seemed

One of the things about the publishing industry that I most enjoy is traveling to conferences and meetings and spending time engaging in conversation with fellow publishing professionals, learning from their experiences, sharing information that is mutually beneficial, and observing what others are doing so that I might embrace new opportunities. In the past month or so, I have been fortunate enough to spend a couple of weeks in New York City; a week for sales conferences and meetings, and a week for BookExpo America (BEA). The two trips differed in many respects and yet shared the traits listed above … Continue reading Doc Martyn’s Soul: A Month in New York – Or so it Seemed