Showing posts with label Richard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richard. Show all posts

Monday, November 28, 2011

Michaelson, Richard. Lipman Pike, America’s First Home Run King.


Michaelson, Richard.     Lipman Pike, America’s First Home Run King.      
Sleeping Bear Press(Cengage)     2011  unp   16.95 978-1-58536-465-1 
elem              VG-BNe   

     Son of Dutch immigrants who arrived in New York in the mid-1800s, Lipman Pike was both the
first Jewish and the first professional (paid) baseball player in the newly
formed National Association of Base Ball Players.  Like all children of
immigrants, Lip wanted to belong to his new country and found his way through
baseball.  Beginning as a teenager, he quickly developed into a major figure in
the sport as both a slugger and a second baseman.  Michaelson’s biography offers
a view of his life through “conversations” between the characters opening a
window into an historic period of baseball that is largely overlooked.  The book
is greatly enhanced by the wonderful illustrations that carry out the themes of
Pike’s life.   It ends with an author’s note discussing the place of baseball in
American life during that time.           Ogintz, Susan

Ellis, Richard. On Thin Ice.


Ellis, Richard.    On Thin Ice. 
Vintage see Random      2010  402p  18.95 978-0-307-45464-5    
hs/adult                E-BN  

Ellis presents a history of interactions between humans and polar bears, beginning with the initial
sightings by Europeans in the eleventh century, and moving through to the
present day, when polar bears number only 22,000.     
This book, sweeping in scope, is filled with well-documented information on polar bears and our uneasy
relationship to them, beginning with the gifting of a polar bear in 1056 by the
Bishop of Iceland to the Emperor of Germany, and dwelling on explorers who were
seeking passage to Asia over northeastern Russia in the nineteenth century.  The
reaction of these explorers to the magnificent beasts was to shoot them on sight,
but also to keep logs and journals documenting their behavior and nature.  Ellis
discusses the origins of the polar bear from the Pleistocene era, its social and
family organization, its adaptation to its environment, its relationship to the
native peoples of Alaska and Canada, and the present predicament of its
threatened status.  He includes many footnotes, references, and beautiful full-
color plates.  Written eloquently and rationally, this book should serve as a
passionate plea for humans to reverse their behavior, lest we lose these bears
altogether.             Kennedy, Carol