
This is the story of baseball’s rich magical
history and the centuries-old culture of superstition in the sport. It
is a love letter to the jinxes, curses, rituals and myths of baseball’s
past and present ― and to the innate mysticism of the game.
For
more than 150 years, a magical culture has been central to the game of
At the turn of the 20th century, a battle between two lucky mascots
defined early World Series matchups. Soon after, two generational curses
spawned decades of heartbreaking losses for the Chicago Cubs and the
Boston Red Sox. Today, players like Bryce Harper perform at-bat rituals,
fans refuse to wash the jerseys of their favorite players, and baseball
people everywhere refuse to utter the words “no-hitter” before there’s
been a hit.
In The Magical Game, journalist and converted
baseball fan Addy Baird turns her reporter’s eye to her favorite sport,
investigating the roots of these magical practices and telling the story
of baseball’s long history of superstition, rituals, curses, jinxes,
hoodoos, and hexes. Spanning three centuries of baseball history and
three dozen more of magical history, Baird takes readers through
fascinating, forgotten tidbits in the sport, untangles the game’s
legends, and considers baseball’s uncertain future. In the face of
recent MLB rule changes and the rise of advanced statistics, Baird looks
at the many decades of concern about baseball’s declining popularity
and the evolution of the sport, as well as why and how a culture of
magic has remained strong at the core of the game for so many years.
Funny, poetic, and deeply researched, The Magical Game will make readers fall in love with baseball all over again.
What I thought about The Magical Game
Baseball is THE sport in my household, so I was intrigued to read this title. I was hoping for some new information and there were tiny nuggets in this book. But for the most part, there isn't a lot of new information on this topic -- if you've followed sports at all, superstitions and rituals are just part of the game.
The book was well-researched and offered background on the topics in general. The author gets personal with her stories of baseball superstitions and her direct interaction with them, and that was interesting.
Overall, this is a good book to read if you want to learn more about sports, especially baseball and the superstitions that drive the players.

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