Foul Ball Audiobook By Jim Bouton cover art

Foul Ball

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Foul Ball

By: Jim Bouton
Narrated by: Jim Seybert, Lesa Lockford
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With his trademark wit and distinctive voice, legendary Ball Four author Jim Bouton recounts his battle against local elites' efforts to replace Wahconah Park, one of the oldest parks in the United States, against the wishes and votes of local citizens. But Foul Ball is more than just a lively romp about saving an old ballpark near Bouton's home in Massachusetts.

In a detailed diary—his first since Ball Four—Bouton takes us along on his wild ride into the teeth of corporate malfeasance, anti-democratic processes, the tyranny of a one-newspaper town, and the real reason why the good old boys wanted to build a new stadium. For the first time in two decades, enjoy Foul Ball as never before with freshly edited content and a new foreword from Jim Bouton's wife, Paula.

©2021 Jim Bouton (P)2021 Dreamscape Media, LLC
Americas Baseball & Softball Biographies & Memoirs Politics & Government State & Local United States
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Jim Bouton's "Ball Four" is still regarded more than 50 years after its publication as perhaps the greatest sports memoir ever. The events in "Foul Ball" take place more than 30 years later, with Bouton retired in Western Massachusetts. He and a friend spearhead a campaign to save and renovate a historic ballpark, as opposed to building an $18 million new stadium. His intriguing journey takes him through small-city politics, independent league maneuvering, a massive environmental cover-up, and local media's conflicts of interest. Bouton, as usual, pulls no punches in his accounting of events. "Foul Ball," as "Ball Four" did before it, will make you cheer and jeer, laugh and cry, and -- most critically -- THINK.

Bouton's OTHER Gem of a Baseball Memoir

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Jim Bouton was one of one. Here the Ball Four author shows the same indomitable love for the game and restless energy that caused such a ruckus before, during, and after the events of Ball Four and its many updates. But this time his energy is focused on trying to preserve and upgrade a historic baseball park in the Berkshires area of Massachusetts in a little backwards town called Pittsfield.

Bouton runs up against all the usual suspects—corrupt developers, polluting out of town corporations, inept politicians, tin pot tyrants in the local media and on and on, in this chronicle of his years-long effort to keep baseball at historic, city-owned Wahconah Park. Filled with Bouton’s usual acerbic observations about anyone he perceives as standing against his goals, this book is a time capsule of America and the politics of the early 2000’s. As ever, Bouton is uniquely able to see how baseball’s deep history and our cultural love for the game clash against the mores and politics of the era to paint a more complex and layered picture than what is a ultimately a game of grown men throwing a ball around would otherwise suggest.

Bouton was a visionary, and it’s hard to read this book in the mid 2020’s and not think about how the Savannah Bananas are thriving as an offshoot of the baseball-related mirth that so many of Bouton’s endeavors capture. The world has realized what the politicians and power players of Pittsfield seemed to have such a hard time with in this book. Simply put, America loves baseball. If you build it, we will come. Wahconah Park is still standing to this day. But Foul Ball captures a time when that was nowhere near a certainty, and shares in great detail what Bouton and his group did to try and preserve it.

If you liked Ball Four, and enjoy Bouton’s first person diarist style, it’s hard to imagine you not enjoying this book, even as most of it involves Bouton banging his head against any wall he can find.

Baseball’s Iconoclast takes on local politics

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