Bill James is toying with us here. This is a collection of James articles that includes a baseball on the cover. Implying baseball stories of the kind James is excellent at – historical references, statistics re-swizzled a new way, pithy writing, unexpected outcome, or at least an expected outcome explained and put into context. Most of the essays hit the mark here, including ones on teams that stink, late career improvements, streaky pitching, great starting rotations, expansion’s impact on upcoming Hall of Fame voting, pitchers that learn, great pitcher duels of the 80s, minor league organization, and what teams know that isn’t true.
But he includes some topics on articles outside of baseball, for him scratching some kind of itch as it were. Included here are short essays about rain measurement, the declining value of advertising, the costs of airport security, tipping, racism in baseball and life, and stoplight cameras. I found the baseball essays better, as expected, since that’s what I’m here for. But as a whole, this is an entertaining lot of stories. It’s the genius of James, to think about things in terms of the basics, to tell the story in entertaining ways, and to come up with a different view than you’d expect starting out. His method works for stats-driven baseball stories, but also for analysis of other topics as well. I enjoyed this one, and will also be reading his next essay collection.