THE NEW YORK METS ENCYCLOPEDIA
PAGE CURRENTLY UNDER REVISION
The New York Mets Encyclopedia
The New York Mets Encyclopedia (Third Edition, Skyhorse Publishers, 2013) extends the Mets saga through the Golden Anniversary Season of 2011 and beyond. This latest volume is completely updated to included new stars (Jose Reyes, David Wright, Johann Santana), landmark events (the first franchise no-hitter), the new state-of-the-art ballpark, additional managers, and much more.
New York Mets Encyclopedia (Second Edition, Sports Publishing LLC, 2003) is fully updated and provides the exciting story of modern-era baseball's most popular expansion-age franchise, with coverage through the 2002 season. From those lovable losers of 1962 and 1963, to the Miracle Mets of 1969 and 1973, and on to the year-in and year-out contenders of the 1980s and 1990s, the Mets have written some of the most exciting pages in baseball history. This volume combines detailed narrative history with archival photographs, statistics, and portraits of the team's most memorable characters throughout four decades of ball club annals.
INSIDE SNEAK PREVIEW (2013 Edition)
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Miracle Mets
Chapter 1 - Summers of Endless Disappointment: Mets Struggles at the Dawn of the New Century
Chapter 2 - Concise 20th History of the New York Mets
Chapter 3 - The Great, the Memorable, and the Colorful: Profiles of 100 Unforgettable Mets Players
Chapter 4 - Unforgettable Moments in Mets History
Chapter 5 - A Dozen of the Mets' Most Memorable Seasons
Chapter 6 - Postseason Heroics
Chapter 7 - The Mets Managers
Chapter 8 - Legendary Front Office Personalities and memorable Broadcast Voices
Chapter 9 - Mets at the Millennium
Chapter 10 - The 2000 Subway Series Season
Chapter 11 - Mets by the Numbers: New York Mets Statistical History
Appendix - New York Mets Bibliography
center>INSIDE SNEAK PREVIEW (2003 Edition)
Table of Contents
Introduction: The Miracle Mets
Chapter 1 - Summers of Endless Disappointment: Mets Struggles at the Dawn of the New Century
Chapter 2 - Concise History of the New York Mets
Chapter 3 - The Great, the Memorable, and the Colorful: Profiles of 100 Unforgettable Mets Players
Chapter 4 - Unforgettable Moments in Mets History
Chapter 5 - A Dozen of the Mets' Most Memorable Seasons
Chapter 6 - Postseason Heroics
Chapter 7 - The Mets Managers
Chapter 8 - Legendary Front Office Personalities and memorable Broadcast Voices
Chapter 9 - Mets at the Millennium
Chapter 10 - The 2000 Subway Series Season
Chapter 11 - Mets by the Numbers: New York Mets Statistical History
Encyclopedia of Major League Team Histories
In his valuable (if now rather outdated) 1993 survey of baseball literature ("Not Quite Ready for Prime Time: Baseball History, 1983-1993" in: Journal of Sports History 21:2), Professor Larry Gerlach comments that "the best historical assessments of most franchises are the essays in Peter C. Bjarkman's Encyclopedia of Major League Baseball Team Histories."
AMERICAN LEAGUE (Volume 2)
Introduction by Peter C. Bjarkman
1. Boston Red Sox by Frederick Ivor-Campbell
2. Chicago White Sox by Richard C. Lindberg
3. Cleveland Indians by Morris A. Eckhouse
4. Detroit Tigers by Morris A. Eckhouse
5. Kansas City Royals by Bill Carle
6. Los Angeles Angels-California Angels by Richard E. Beverage
7. New York Yankees by Marty Appel
8. Philadelphia Athletics-Kansas City Athletics-Oakland A's by Norman L. Macht
9. St. Louis Browns-Baltimore Orioles by Bill Felber
10. Seattle Mariners by James O'Donnell
11. Seattle Pilots-Milwaukee Brewers by Paul D. Adomites
12. Toronto Blue Jays by Peter C. Bjarkman
13. Washinton Senators-Minnesota Twins by Peter C. Bjarkman
14. Washington Senators-Texas Rangers by Peter C. Bjarkman
NATIONAL LEAGUE (Volume 1)
Introduction by Peter C. Bjarkman
1. Boston Braves-Milwaukee Braves-Atlanta Braves by Morris Eckhouse
2. Brooklyn Dodgers-Los Angeles Dodgers by Peter C. Bjarkman
3. Chicago Cubs by Art Ahrens
4. Cincinnati Reds by Peter C. Bjarkman
5. Houston Colt .45s-Houston Astros by John M. Carroll
6. Montreal Expos by Peter C. Bjarkman
7. New York Giants-San Francisco Giants by Fred Stein
8. New York Mets by Pete Cava
9. Philadelphia Phillies by Peter C. Bjarkman
10. Pittsburgh Pirates by Paul D. Adomites
11. San Diego Padres by David L. Porter
12. St. Louis Cardinals by Stan W. Carlson
13. Colorado Rockies by Peter C. Bjarkman
14. Florida Marlins by Peter C. Bjarkman
Baseball's Great Dynasties Series
The Brooklyn Dodgers. New York and Secaucus, NJ: Chartwell Books, 1992.
It seems as though almost everyone who first became adicted to baseball in its more innocent days of real grass and sunshine still loves the Dodgers from Brooklyn. From the earliest seasons of the hapless Daffiness Dodgers in the 1930s, through the trailblazing integration experiment of Rickey and Robinson, on to the glorious reign of the "Boys of Summer" dynasty team of the early 1950s, the Brooklyn Bums hold a special charm for diehard fans everywhere, a magical pull on the heartstrings matched by no other single baseball franchise. Although the Brooklyn club ceased to exist as a team in 1957, and their beloved shrine in Ebbets Field was levelled by urban development more than three decades ago, the ghostly presence of these long-departed Dodgers has only gained strength over the past generation, emerging as a living metaphor for the belief that professional baseball teams are cherished public property. The long-silent Dodgers still live on today as the first and only team ever owned solely by the memories of their devoted fandom.
Baseball's Great Dynasties: The Reds. New York: Gallery Books, 1991.
The Cincinnati Reds are baseball's team of unsurpassed innovation. It was Cincinnati that witnessed such pioneering moments as the first pro team; the first padded glove and double play; the sport's first switch-hitter, doubleheader, and no-hit game; the inauguration of night baseball and televised league games; and the very first all-synthetic playing surface. Blended with this spirit of innovation is an uncompromising sense of baseball tradition. Cincinnati is, after all, the city where pro baseball began with Harry Wright's barnstorming Red Stockings in 1869, and it remains today the traditional home of the annual spring religious rite know as major league baseball's Opening Day. Throughout the past century and a quarter the Queen City has also been home to some of the game's greatest moments and its most colorful players. In fact no two players in baseball's entire history have ever been as unbendingly revered by the adoring hometown fans as have lead-footed yet powerful-hitting catcher Ernie Lombardi with the 1930s pre-war Reds, and incomparable Pete Rose ("Charlie Hustle") of the modern-day Big Red Machine.
Baseball's Great Dynasties: The Dodgers. New York: Gallery Books, 1990.
First came the notorious Daffiness Dodgers of the 1920s and 1930s, bungling big-league pretenders stumbling into memorable traffic jams along the basepaths. Later arose the glorious "Boys of Summer" Dodgers immortalized for all ages of true baseball fans by the nostalgic portraits of author Roger Kahn. More recent seasons have witnessed the efficient and businesslike Los Angeles club of the much maligned Walter O'Malley — transplanted West Coast Dodgers boasting a wholesome new image and asserting relentless domination over National League baseball for three decades. While many present-day ball clubs have dared to commandeer the hollow title of America's Team, no franchise in baseball history has so persistently captured the imagination and the rabid following of so many of the nation's zealous baseball fans.
The Toronto Blue Jays. New York: Gallery Books, 1990 and B. Mitchell Publishers, 1990.
Loaded with talented and colorful young players, and blessed with baseball's most lavish pleasure-dome stadium, the Toronto Blue Jays are one of the premier drawing cards of North America's favorite pastime. In 1989 over 3.3 million fans crammed into Toronto's Exhibition Stadium and passed through the portals of the remarkable Toronto SkyDome, establishing the largest home attendance total in the long history of American League baseball. The Blue Jays story that unfolds in these chapters is the exciting saga of a youthful baseball franchise with an already rich and stories history—one stretching back across the past decade and a half, and encompassing some of contemporary baseball's most distinctive heroes and most cherished moments.