“Mets Stories I Only Tell My Friends”

The author: Art Shamsky with Matthew Silverman
The details: Triumph Books, $30, 256 pages, released March 11, 2025; best available at the publishers website and Bookshop.org.
“Get Your Tokens Ready:
The Late 1990s Road to the Subway Series”

The author: Chris Donnelly
The details: University of Nebraska Press, $34.95, 344 pages, released May 1, 2025; best available at the publishers website and Bookshop.org.
“Out of the Mouth of Babe:
Babe Ruth on Life: Pitching, Hitting,
Striking Out, and Coming Back Swinging”

The author: Kelly Bennett
The details: Familius Publishing, 200 pages, $16.99, released April 15, 2025; best available at the publishers’ website and Bookshop.org.
“Yankees, Typewriters, Scandals
and Cooperstown: A Baseball Memoir”
The author: Bill Madden
The details: Triumph Books, 256 pages, $30, released April 1, 2025; best available at the publishers website and Bookshop.org.

A review in 90 feet or less
The top five loudest news stories involving New York’s professional baseball teams in 2025, starting in spring training, have been, more or less, in this order:

1. Believe it or not, Yankees players can wear hair on their face (which had many pulling out their global hair). And then they got rid of Alex Verdugo, who immediately shed a large beard as an outfielder with the Atlanta Braves.
2. The Yankees won’t stoop to playing Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York” if they lose a home game.
3. The Yankees leased George Steinbrenner Stadium in St. Petersburg to the Tampa Bay Rays this season — and no, the Yankees won’t play “New York, New York” after they defeat them from the oddness of sitting in the visiting dugout.
4. Torpedo bats are a thing. And legal. Alex Verdugo may want to look into this.

5. New York Mets owner Steve Cohen has, according to the Sports Business Journal, “an ambitious long-term vision for the area surrounding City Field” that will cost about $8 billion to turn 50 acres of asphalt parking lots into a Hard Rock Hotel and Casino, a food hall and a 5,000-seat indoor concern venue.
And it seems to be legal for someone who the story points out is a “$21 billion hedge fund titan.”
Continue reading “Day 17 of 2025 baseball book reviews: The token torpedos of NYC book bombing”











