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The book recounts the history of baseball through anecdotes about iconic pitches and interviews with pitchers such as Hall of Famers Steve Carlton, Bob Gibson and Nolan Ryan, as well as pitchers like Jamie Moyer and J.R. Richard. It also describes the mechanics of pitching, and its centrality to the game of baseball.
CD Review (formerly known as Digital Audio and Digital Audio and Compact Disc Review) is a discontinued American monthly magazine that specialized in reviewing albums and audio electronics, especially compact discs. [1] The magazine was founded by publisher Wayne Green. [2] The magazine lasted from September 1984 to May 1996. [3]
Below is a list of literary magazines and journals: periodicals devoted to book reviews, creative nonfiction, essays, poems, short fiction, and similar literary endeavors. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Because the majority are from the United States , the country of origin is only listed for those outside the U.S.
The Casey Award (stylized as CASEY) is an annual literary award that has been given to the best baseball book of the year since 1983.The award was created by Mike Shannon and W. J. Harrison, editors and co-founders of Spitball: The Literary Baseball Magazine because, up until then, there was no award given to authors and publishers of distinguished baseball literature; it is considered to be ...
Cadence; Canadian Musician; Canadian Review of Music and Art; Careless Talk Costs Lives (also known as Careless Talk or CTCL); Cashbox; CCM; CD Review (also known as Digital Audio and Digital Audio and Compact Disc Review)
The New Musical Magazine, Review, and Register (London, 1809–1810), FT The Quarterly Musical Magazine and Review (London, 1818–1828), FT The English Musical Gazette; or, Monthly Intelligencer (London, 1819), FT The Harmonicon (London, 1823–1833), FT The Musical Magazine (London, 1835), FT The Musical World (London, 1836–1891), FT
CLOAD was a cassette and disk magazine for the TRS-80 which started in 1978. [4] The magazine ran monthly and provided tapes by subscription. [5] The magazine was named after the command to load a tape into the TRS-80. [5] Compute!'s Gazette, originally announced as The Commodore Gazette, was a spinoff of Compute! for the Commodore 64. [6]
Volume was a magazine in the form of a series of compact disc compilation albums that were published in the UK in the early to mid 1990s. The albums typically contained exclusive tracks and remixes from a diverse range of indie artists. Each album was packaged with a 192-page booklet that contained features on the artists, and original articles.