When I saw this book in Zenith Books in Duluth, Minnesota, I was instantly fascinated. The only other book about Northern League baseball that I'd ever heard of was Slouching Towards Fargo. Having recently read that book, and also made my re-acquaintance with the Saint Paul Saints (and the American Association, the current league that grew out of the Northern League) this summer it only seemed natural.
Wild and Outside is an interesting baseball time capsule. The book was released in 1995, in the aftermath of the last great baseball labor dispute, the lost season, and all the ill-will that the MLB generated in 1994. It also catches the Northern League in it's second season of operation, when it had tasted success but still faced a very tenuous future. The book starts with an introduction to the Northern League and some of it's key figures, and an overview of the 1993 season. The majority of the book is a journalist's account of that sophomore season in 1994.
This book isn't an in-depth recounting of every game of the season, or a source for stats. Fatsis concentrated primarily on the business and operations aspects of the league, but leavens it well with key points of the baseball season, a few important games, and the overall results. The cast is made up of a good mix of owners, managers, coaches, and players. Some of them do well, some of them fail. The main story is what makes the Northern League, an independent minor league, so different from Major League/affiliated baseball and why those differences lead to the Northern League's success. Each of the teams gets at least some dedicated coverage, but the Saint Paul Saints and Duluth-Superior Dukes get a little more than the others.
Wild and Outside might sound kind of dry from the above description, but it's not. It's well paced and populated with entertaining characters. I read it in just two days! Fatsis also does a great job building a few dramatic stories into the narrative, both following individual players and teams. So, who is this book for? It was written as a timely examination of the contrast of the ills of Major League Baseball and the contrasting strengths of the independent Northern League. In that sense, the book is a bit outdated. MLB has long moved on from the aftermath of the '94 strike (although the storm clouds of labor trouble once again rumble on the horizon), and the Northern League is no longer in operation (although most of the teams covered in the book live on in the current American Association). What you can still get from this book is a good look at the origins of the current wild, fun atmosphere that prevails in many Minor League ballparks (independent or affiliated). There are also tons of great stories that any Minnesota, Iowa, Canadian, or just Minor League baseball fans will enjoy.