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   Book Info

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Classic Baseball: The Photographs of Walter Iooss Jr.  
Author: Walter Iooss Jr., Dave Anderson (Photographer)
ISBN: 0810942585
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
The photographs of veteran baseball photographer Walter Iooss Jr. are collected in this handsome celebration of the national pastime. Iooss Jr., who started snapping baseball as a teen, went on to become a heralded photographer for Sports Illustrated before the age of 21, beginning his career with a most memorable assignment: capturing Roger Maris's record-breaking 61st home run in 1961. He was still shooting 37 years later, on hand to capture Mark McGwire's then-record 70th round-tripper in 1998. Such historical range is reflected in the book. Iooss's sharp eye for composition, on exhibit from the very beginning, shines from a shot taken in Havana in 1999 of children playing stickball. The book is divided into seven sections: faces, ballparks, pitchers, hitters, base runners, managers and celebrations and all the game's bright lights are on brilliant display, from Mantle to Ken Griffey Jr., from Philly's old Connie Mack stadium to Seattle's pristine new Safeco field. Fans will surely treasure the terrific shots of their idols Roberto Clemente's intense glare, Hank Aaron rounding the bases, a young, buzz-cut Pete Rose smiling for the cameras. Still, other, less glorious shots, perhaps, are equally appealing: Pittsburgh's Dave Parker having a smoke in the dugout in 1980; the old scoreboard at Wrigley field. New York Times columnist Dave Anderson adds his voice to set the stage, but the photos (70 in color, 160 in all) truly speak for themselves. Just when you think you you're about to be lulled to sleep, Iooss writes about the game he loves, something breathtaking happens. Luckily for fans, Iooss was there to capture many of these moments. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Book Description
Joe Dimaggio, Sandy Koufax, Cal Ripken, Sammy Sosa: more than mere athletes, these men, with their superlative physical skills, grace under pressure, and all-too-human foibles, rank as classic American heroes. Here, world-famous photographer Walter Iooss Jr. presents equally classic images of baseball greats of the past 40 years. Combining nostalgic postwar-era portraits with action shots of today's most popular players, and enhanced by the commentary of Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Dave Anderson, Classic Baseball offers the definitive illustrated account of the sport since the 1960s. Special features like a six-page gatefold, collages created by Iooss exclusively for the book, and several never-before-published images make this the natural follow-up to Abrams' top-selling Baseball's Golden Age.

About the Author
While still in high school, Walter Iooss Jr. received one of his first assignments from Sports Illustrated: to photograph Roger Maris's attempt to break Babe Ruth's home run record. His work today includes both sports journalism and advertising photography, and he is the photographer of the bestseller Rare Air. Iooss lives in Montauk, New York. Pulitzer Prize-winner Dave Anderson writes three sports columns a week for The New York Times and is the author of some 350 magazine articles and 22 books, including the bestsellers One Knee Equals Two Feet and Everything Else You Need to Know about Football and All Madden: Hey, I'm Talking Football, both with John Madden. He lives in Tenafly, New Jersey.




Classic Baseball: The Photographs of Walter Iooss JR.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Joe Dimaggio, Sandy Koufax, Cal Ripken, Sammy Sosa: more than mere athletes, these men, with their superlative physical skills, grace under pressure, and all-too-human foibles, rank as classic American heroes. Here, world-famous photographer Walter Iooss Jr. presents equally classic images of baseball greats of the past 40 years. Combining nostalgic postwar-era portraits with action shots of today's most popular players, and enhanced by the commentary of Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Dave Anderson, Classic Baseball offers the definitive illustrated account of the sport since the 1960s.

Special features like a six-page gatefold, collages created by Iooss exclusively for the book, and several never-before-published images make this the natural follow-up to Abrams' top-selling Baseball's Golden Age.

About the Author:While still in high school, Walter Iooss Jr. received one of his first assignments from Sports Illustrated: to photograph Roger Maris's attempt to break Babe Ruth's home run record. His work today includes both sports journalism and advertising photography, and he is the photographer of the bestseller Rare Air. Iooss lives in Montauk, New York. Pulitzer Prize-winner Dave Anderson writes three sports columns a week for The New York Times and is the author of some 350 magazine articles and 22 books, including the bestsellers One Knee Equals Two Feet and Everything Else You Need to Know about Football and All Madden: Hey, I'm Talking Football, both with John Madden. He lives in Tenafly, New Jersey.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The photographs of veteran baseball photographer Walter Iooss Jr. are collected in this handsome celebration of the national pastime. Iooss Jr., who started snapping baseball as a teen, went on to become a heralded photographer for Sports Illustrated before the age of 21, beginning his career with a most memorable assignment: capturing Roger Maris's record-breaking 61st home run in 1961. He was still shooting 37 years later, on hand to capture Mark McGwire's then-record 70th round-tripper in 1998. Such historical range is reflected in the book. Iooss's sharp eye for composition, on exhibit from the very beginning, shines from a shot taken in Havana in 1999 of children playing stickball. The book is divided into seven sections: faces, ballparks, pitchers, hitters, base runners, managers and celebrations and all the game's bright lights are on brilliant display, from Mantle to Ken Griffey Jr., from Philly's old Connie Mack stadium to Seattle's pristine new Safeco field. Fans will surely treasure the terrific shots of their idols Roberto Clemente's intense glare, Hank Aaron rounding the bases, a young, buzz-cut Pete Rose smiling for the cameras. Still, other, less glorious shots, perhaps, are equally appealing: Pittsburgh's Dave Parker having a smoke in the dugout in 1980; the old scoreboard at Wrigley field. New York Times columnist Dave Anderson adds his voice to set the stage, but the photos (70 in color, 160 in all) truly speak for themselves. Just when you think you you're about to be lulled to sleep, Iooss writes about the game he loves, something breathtaking happens. Luckily for fans, Iooss was there to capture many of these moments. (Mar.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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