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272 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2013
Further, the author spends a lot of time toward the end of the book talking about Canadian baseball in general. While it is something that should be discussed, if you're going to bill your book as a book about the Blue Jays, perhaps you should talk about them a little more.
The writing is also pretty bad. As someone trained in journalism, I grew irritated by the author's passive constructions. Decisions were made, players were fired, messages were received. Never "So-and-so fired so-and-so" or "so-and-so got the message." There's also very little consistency in voice—the book is mostly told in a factual, third-person voice. But sporadically the author tries to insert jokes or touches of personality, and it comes across as forced. Do one or the other.
It's also very stat-heavy. Granted, baseball is a sport that thrives on stats- WHIP, ERA, OPS, RBI... the list of acronyms goes on. But he loads so many stats into the book that I can barely recall anything. My eyes glazed over the numbers after a while.
To his credit, Jeff Blair did interview important Blue Jays management like Alex Anthopoulos, Paul Beeston, Roberto Alomar and Cito Gaston. At the same time, though, he doesn't talk to too many players, who are arguably some of the most important parts of the Blue Jays franchise.
I'll wait for a better Blue Jays retrospective book to come out. I know someone, somewhere, can write a much better book.