“Dangerous Danny Gardella:
Baseball’s Neglected Trailblazer
for Today’s Millionaire Athletes”

The author: Robert Elias
The details: Rowman & Littlefield, 325 pages, $39, released April 15, 2025; best found at the publisher’s website or BookShop.org
A review in 90 feet or less

Get to know Daniel Lewis Gardella. No real danger in that.
Unless you’re concerned about getting lumped in with Communists and other people up to no good for baseball’s financial success.
Robert Elias isn’t deterred.

The New York native whose journey as a university teacher went through Montreal (McGill), Boston and France (Tufts), College Park and Europe (Maryland), Geneva (Graduate Institute of International Studies) and the Bay Area (UC Berkeley and now at University of San Francisco), Elias dug in as abaseball/politics/legal studies historical researcher authoring works such as “Baseball and the American Dream: Race, Class, Gender, and the National Pastime” in 2001 and “The Empire Strikes Out: How Baseball Sold U.S. Foreign Policy and Promoted the American Way Abroad” in 2010.
Then came the two he collaborated with Pete Dreier that focused on the game’s anarchistic best in “Baseball Rebels: The Players, People, and Social Movements That Shook Up the Game and Changed America” (a finalist for the 2023 Seymour Medal) and “Major League Rebels: Baseball Battles over Workers’ Rights and American Empire,” both in 2022 and curiously by two different publishers as we noted back then.
All trails seem to lead back to this Gardella character.
Not by accident.
“In those books one person kept popping up: Danny Gardella,” Elias writes in the preface of this bio. “Apparently an obscure figure, he nevertheless appeared over and over.”
Time to flesh it out.
Continue reading “Day 18 of 2025 baseball book reviews: The Gardella Years of Living Dangerously”















