Monday, October 13, 2014

The Cheater's Guide to Baseball

The Cheater's Guide to Baseball is a fun read, if nothing else. Covered here are such diverse topics as groundskeeping for an advantage, stealing signs, doctoring the ball, gambling, and steroid usage. Zumsteg maintains a relatively lighthearted tone throughout, not venturing much into moralizing until we get to gambling and steroids. As he says, cheating helped create the modern game (with pitchers no longer delivering the ball in a place the batter calls for, in trick pitches, corking the bat, etc)

Worth picking up, if you're interested in baseball.

Saturday, October 11, 2014

The Three Musketeers

I realize that I've filed The Three Musketeers under "historical fiction", which isn't altogether accurate -- yes, this is fiction set in the past, but it's almost an alternate history type of fiction; while some of the characters portrayed here (Louis XIII, Cardinal Richeliu, Anne of Austria, the Duke of Buckingham, D'Artagnan himself) are clearly historical, the specific interactions are not. Also, in "I am a big dummy" news, the author's preface states that the following novel is based entirely on some obscure memoirs he found. Imagine my surprise when I realized this wasn't a literary device, but an admission he was borrowing from an earlier novel.

Dumas sets a good pace and keeps it up -- the novel never drags, which is impressive for something that was originally serialized, as that can tend to lead to filler. The one exception was later in the novel, when one character was imprisoned, and there were several chapters from their viewpoint that I didn't find particularly engaging.

The one criticism I would make was that while the musketeers are trusted members of the king's guard, the scope seems a little small, and the denouement seems out-of-place and petty, as does the resolution to another conflict. But this is a fun, well-paced novel that's worth reading once.