Friday, June 04, 2010

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 6/4/2010

6/4/1989:
Junior Felix hits a two-run homer in the 12th inning to cap a huge comeback and give the Toronto Blue Jays a 13-11 victory over the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. Boston led 10-0 after six innings, but Toronto scored twice in the seventh inning, added four more runs in the eighth and briefly went ahead, 11-10, in the ninth on a grand-slam homer by Ernie Whitt. Boston starter Mike Smithson was in complete command before having to leave the game with a blister. Whitt, formerly a Red Sox prospect, goes 4-for-5 for the Jays, who get three innings of scoreless relief from Duane Ward to win their 12th straight game at Fenway Park.

Birthdays:
Bobby Wanzer b. 1921
Pat Studstill b. 1938
Sandra Haynie b. 1943
Xavier McDaniel b. 1963
Darin Erstad b. 1974

Packers Fact:
Two Packers' players have earned consensus All-Pro honors five times. End Don Hutson was one of them. Center Jim Ringo was the other.

http://www.fingertime.com/chopperdrop.php
Chopper Drop
You've only got a couple of torpedos with each pass, so aim carefully and flatten the buildings. Hint: The helicopter keeps flying lower, so get rid of the taller buildings first.

STALIN LIVES
In modern-day Russia, nostalgia for Joseph Stalin is on the rise, and his ghost has been spotted in the Moscow subway. In a country of mobsters, corrupt officials, and ruthless capitalists, Senior Investigator Arkady Renko works relentlessly to uncover the ugly truth behind the apparition as well as the deaths of former members of an elite military unit, the Black Berets. Martin Cruz Smith has crafted another arrestingly vivid page-turner in a series of novels that began in 1981 with the bestselling Gorky Park.

STALIN’S GHOST: AN ARKADY RENKO NOVEL, by Martin Cruz Smith (Pocket Books, 2008)

BOSCOS FAMOUS FLAMING STONE BEER
Boscos Brewing Co., Memphis, Tennessee

Stone beer, or “Steinbier,” is made using a centuries-old brewing method wherein glowing-hot rocks are used to boil beer prior to fermentation. The stones collect a layer of caramelized malt sugar, and when they’re added back to the fermenter, that malt caramel goes right back into the beer. To say Boscos stone beer retains caramel flavor and aroma is an understatement—it smells just like a hot fudge sundae, vanilla ice cream and all. Bottle-conditioned, it’s a full amber color with an orange hue and a cloudy haze. Carbonation and head are both light, as is the hop character. Still it’s very well balanced, with a dry finish. Kudos to Chuck Skypeck and Fred Scheer for embarking on such a difficult process, and pulling off such a likeable, drinkable beer with aplomb. Boscos Stone Beer won a Silver medal at the 2005 Great American Beer Festival.

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Thursday, June 03, 2010

Sports Fact & Book Rec of the Day 6/3/2010

6/3/1932:
In one of baseball's most remarkable but overlooked batting feats, Yankee third baseman Tony Lazzeri becomes the only player in major league history to go for a "natural grand cycle" - hitting for a single, double, triple and home run in that order, with the homer being a grand slam. Unfortunately for the future Hall of Famer, he performs this milestone achievement on the same day that teammate Lou Gehrig becomes the first man in the 20th century to hit four home runs in one game and on the same day that longtime New York Giants manager John McGraw announces his retirement. Lazzeri's five-for-six afternoon is actually just a nominal portion of the Yankees' 23-hit fusillade as they bombard the Philadelphia A's 20-13, at Shibe Park.

Birthdays:
Jim Gentile b. 1934
Billy Cunningham b. 1943
Barry Beck b. 1957
Travis Hafner b. 1977
Rafael Nadal b. 1986

Packers Fact:
End Don Hutson earned the NFL's official MVP award following both the 1941 and 1942 seasons.


http://www.archive.org/details/barstow_disneyland_dream_1956
Disneyland Dream
Travel back to the earliest days of Disneyland (when attractions like the Pirates of the Caribbean and Space Mountain) were still on the drawing board) in this 30-minute home movie of the Barstow family's trip to Los Angeles. It is also a documentary of an ideal middle-class American vacation in the mid-50s, when traveling to California on a plane was an extraordinary adventure, and includes footage of other iconic Los Angeles attractions like Knott's Berry Farm, a bus tour of Hollywood, and a trip to Catalina Island on a glass-bottomed boat.


JUNE IS BUSTIN’ OUT ALL OVER
This is not a critical biography or a cross section or a selection—it’s the whole banana, every lyrical word Oscar Hammerstein II wrote, as far as Amy Asch knows. (She previously worked with Roger Kimball on the lyrics of Irving Berlin and Lorenz Hart.) From the tender to the comical to the slightly wacky, from huge Broadway shows to two-week flops: Here are more than 850 songs, with a paragraph or two describing each show or review the songs were intended for and the people involved.

THE COMPLETE LYRICS OF OSCAR HAMMERSTEIN II; edited by Amy Asch (Knopf, 2008)

HOEGAARDEN
Hoegaarden Brewery, Hoegaarden, Belgium

This classic, very pale witbier has undergone many changes over the years, but nevertheless remains a delicious summer brew. Control the level of haze by stopping the pour two-thirds of the way through, swirling the beer to pick up the sediment, and then adding the remainder to your glass. The sediment adds flavor and some nuances in the mouthfeel. Loads of egg-white froth on top, big coriander spice in the aroma, some lemon and orange notes, and of course some wheat grain. The flavor is grainy sweet, with citrus and spice continuing. The finish too is sweet, with just a bit of tartness and a slight chalkiness if you mix in the sediment. The perfect summer beer. Light and refreshing but full of flavor, Hoegaarden won a Gold medal at the 2008 World Beer Cup in the Belgian-style White category.

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Book Rec of the Day 5/22-6/2/2010

PEN/FAULKNER FINALIST
A sweeping saga and love story of the exodus to Oregon in 1847. Author Karen Fisher found the journals of a forebear, 11-year-old Emma. Through Emma’s eyes we learn of her mother, Lucy, widowed and remarried, the husband who forces his family away from Iowa, and the bigger-than-life Scotsman who helps them and dazzles Lucy as they launch themselves into unknown territory.

A SUDDEN COUNTRY, by Karen Fisher (Random House, 2006)

WHASSUP WITH THE RECORD BUSINESS?
McSweeney’s contributor Dan Kennedy, an ardent rock fan since his childhood in the ’70s, landed a job in marketing at Atlantic Records. He hung on for 18 months in “a modern-day ivory tower of mogul monsters” but was dismissed when the company was taken over. This is his power-ballad memoir of that time, and it’s rock ’n’ roll funny. There are confused run-ins with music stars, scathing observations of corporate life, and executives’ disconnect with the music they are trying to sell. Dig the helpful lists, such as “Inappropriate Greetings and Salutations for Middle-Aged White Record Executives to Exchange: #1. Hello, Dawg.”

ROCK ON: AN OFFICE POWER BALLAD, by Dan Kennedy (Algonquin Books, 2008)

TWO FROM SUE
Sue Miller has not been idle since 1986, when she burst onto the scene with the tragic and beautiful The Good Mother. In Lost in the Forest, set among the California vineyards, a man falls in love with his ex-wife after her second husband dies, and the family quilt must stitch itself together again. In The Senator’s Wife, two couples (one a retired U.S. senator and his wife) occupy a duplex in New England. As the two women begin to cross paths more often, they spin a complex spiderweb of events.

LOST IN THE FOREST, by Sue Miller (Ballantine Books, 2006)

THE SENATOR’S WIFE, (Knopf, 2008)

DEAR NANCY, DEBORAH, DIANA, AND UNITY
One of five famous sisters (see Nancy in tomorrow’s entry), Jessica Mitford, author of The American Way of Death, among many other titles, engaged in extensive correspondence. Besides keeping in touch with her sisters, she wrote to personages from Winston Churchill to Katharine Graham to Hillary Rodham Clinton on a wide range of subjects including fascism, communism and its adherents (she was one, after all), fat farms, and writing programs, all with warmth, humor, and singular wit.

DECCA: THE LETTERS OF JESSICA MITFORD, by Jessica Mitford and Peter Y. Sussman (Knopf, 2006)

TIMELESS CLASSICS
For anyone who knows only BBC or movie adaptations of Nancy Mitford’s masterpieces from the 1940s, or who read them long ago—run, do not walk, to the nearest bookstore, library, or online purveyor, and sink into some of the best writing this side of Jane Austen. The Radlett family, as seen through the eyes of the less glamorous but beloved adopted niece-sister, Fanny, is a unique and unforgettable creation; the prose cuts like a diamond.

THE PURSUIT OF LOVE

LOVE IN A COLD CLIMATE, by Nancy Mitford (Vintage, 2001)

POLYGAMY
Carolyn Jessop was born into the Fundamentalist Church of the Latter-Day Saints. At age 18 she was forced to wed a 50-year-old man who already had three wives and would go on to marry more. Escape is her story of life in the cult, how she fled with her eight children, and the way she finally freed herself of a disgraceful kind of bondage that continues to exist in 21st-century America. A fascinating, horrifying book.

ESCAPE, by Carolyn Jessop and Laura Palmer (Broadway Books, 2007)

ON THE FACTORY FLOOR WITH BETTE AND JOAN
When romance meets business, what do you get? The movie studio system. Back in the bad old days of Hollywood, Warner Bros. and MGM manufactured products such as Tyrone Power and Lana Turner and sold them to the American public. Jeanine Basinger, chair of film studies at Wesleyan University, gives us a nostalgic and entertaining account of how it all worked.

THE STAR MACHINE, by Jeanine Basinger (Knopf, 2007)

“THE LAST FULL MEASURE OF DEVOTION”
Memorial Day was first officially observed in 1868 to honor the Civil War dead. It’s no wonder. The first modern war brought carnage beyond anything the nation had ever known. Drew Gilpin Faust shows how slaughter on such a scale changed Americans’ views of war and death in practical as well as profound ways—where and how do you bury so many men? The Washington Post says, “A powerful corrective to all the romantic claptrap that still envelops a war that took as many American lives, 620,000, as all other wars from the Revolution to Korea combined.”

THIS REPUBLIC OF SUFFERING: DEATH AND THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR, by Drew Gilpin Faust (Knopf, 2008)

IN DARKEST DUBLIN
“It was not the dead that seemed to Quirke uncanny but the living. When he walked into the morgue long after midnight and saw Malachy Griffin there, he felt a shiver along his spine that was to prove prophetic, a tremor of troubles to come.” Christine Falls is set in a brooding, dark, and foggy 1950s Dublin evoked in the elegant, lyrical prose of Benjamin Black (otherwise known as the prizewinning literary novelist John Banville). As beautifully plotted and suspenseful a noir mystery as you are likely to come across this year.

CHRISTINE FALLS, by Benjamin Black (Henry Holt, 2007)

TREND SPOTTER
This book, winner of Washington Monthly’s Political Book Award and named one of Harvard Business Review’s 20 annual Breakthrough Ideas, traces a trend that the author has studied for some time—the rise of a creative class, as he calls it. Richard Florida elucidates how it shows in work, play, clothing, approach to ideas, synthesis of information, economy, everything we do, as well as how we can use our behaviors to better advantage for society.

THE RISE OF THE CREATIVE CLASS: AND HOW IT’S TRANSFORMING WORK, LEISURE, COMMUNITY, AND EVERYDAY LIFE, by Richard Florida (Basic Books, 2002)

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