This general history of baseball opens with a chronology from the eighteenth century to the 2012 season, and then moves to an introductory essay for an in-depth overview. The dictionary portion features more than 900 cross-referenced entries covering people (players, managers, coaches, umpires); teams (the author notes that any team that has ever had major-league status is included as well as prominent teams from the Negro Leagues); and places (stadiums and ballparks). Twelve appendixes cover various statistics, and an extensive bibliography rounds out the work. This is a good (albeit plain) book for anyone wanting to know more about baseball and is recommended for circulating collections as well.
— Booklist
For the past three decades, Spatz (chairman, Soc. for American Baseball Research Records Committee) has written prolifically on a variety of baseball topics. In this volume of 900 cross-referenced entries, he emphasizes the American major leagues but also includes several citations to the minor leagues, Negro Leagues, women’s baseball, college baseball, baseball in other countries, and other non-major-league-related topics. He covers the subjects he feels are most important, such as Hall of Fame members, others not in the Hall who had a significant impact on the game, teams, stadiums, rules, awards, fielding positions, and major statistical categories. Entries range in length from a few sentences to more than a page. Other features are an explanatory listing of acronyms and abbreviations, a chronology, an introductory essay, and 12 appendixes of statistical lists. The book concludes with an extensive (46-page) bibliography. Although the work differs in approach and scope from other well-regarded publications on the sport, such as The Dickson Baseball Dictionary, Encyclopedia of Baseball Statistics, and The Baseball Encyclopedia, it contains an abundance of information on a broad range of topics and deftly fills the need for a single-volume general overview of the nation’s pastime and its history. VERDICT An informative resource for students, beginning researchers, and anyone wanting a basic introduction to baseball in the United States and elsewhere.
— Library Journal
This excellent reference work by independent scholar Spatz is focused on, though not limited to, Major League baseball. It covers players, off-the-field personnel, ballparks, leagues, teams, organizations, terminology, rules, awards, and baseball-playing countries. Biographical entries, the largest category, are limited to members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame, plus a few probable Hall of Famers and other significant contributors to the game. Also included are a brief introductory essay, a chronology (1791-2012), and an extensive bibliography. Twelve short appendixes list the results of the World Series (1903-2012), College World Series winners (1947-2012), and career leaders in selected statistical categories (e.g., batting average, runs scored, and games pitched). Other more specialized resources offer broader coverage of baseball topics, e.g., Paul Dickson's The Dickson Baseball Dictionary, edited by Skip McAfee (3rd ed., CH, Aug'09, 46-6531), on terminology; Donald Dewey and Nicholas Acocella's The Biographical History of Baseball (CH, Dec'02, 40-1880) for biographical information; and Baseball-reference.com (CH, Apr'03, 40-4671) for regularly updated statistics. Nevertheless, Spatz's detailed dictionary provides easy access to a wealth of information, and will be of value to anyone interested in baseball's rich history. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates and above; general readers.
— Choice Reviews
Historical Dictionary of Baseball is a comprehensive reference work of all things baseball and includes noteworthy players, teams, rules, owners, leagues, and more. A volume in the ongoing Historical Dictionaries of Sports series, the work is designed as 'the perfect starting point for anyone doing research'. The book aptly fits the definition. The work comprises an editor’s foreword, brief preface, four pages of acronyms and abbreviations, a 22 page chronology, a lengthy introduction, an A to Z dictionary, 12 appendices, and an extensive bibliography. The heart of the 500 plus pages is the 24 chapters representing each letter of the alphabet, except X and Z. Historical Dictionary of Baseball is a commendable and well-done work of interest to school, public, and other libraries serving a clientele interested in athletes and sports. ... Historical Dictionary of Baseball is a very solid reference work.
— Reference Reviews
To the casual fan names such as Babe Ruth and terms like no-hitter are part of the language of baseball. For those more interested and experienced, this 11th volume in Scarecrow's new historical sports dictionaries is a welcome addition to reference literature. Arranged in alphabetic order, more than 900 names, places, terms, organizations, leagues and conferences, teams and schools, and events chronicle the history of the game. Included are players, teams, and the game's rules and statistical categories. Both players and nonplayers (e.g., general managers, coaches, umpires) are given biographical entries. An interesting chronology and introduction precede the well-written entries and 12 appendixes trace professional and college baseball, World Series results, and statistical information (e.g., career leaders in games played, batting average, home runs, games pitched). Cross-references in bold lead the user to other relevant entries. Nearly 40 pages of bibliography conclude this useful ready-reference book.
— American Reference Books Annual