Ivan R. Dee
Pages: 560
Trim: 7¼ x 9¾
978-1-56663-677-3 • Hardback • March 2006 • $29.95 • (£25.00)
978-1-56663-954-5 • eBook • March 2006 • $28.50 • (£19.99)
Peter Morris won the coveted Seymour Medal of the Society for American Baseball Research (SABR) for his book Baseball Fever, about early baseball in Michigan. He has also been honored by USA Today Sports Weekly. A graduate of the University of Toronto and Michigan State University and a former national and international Scrabble champion, he is now a researcher at the Michigan Public Health Institute and lives in Haslett, Michigan. Visit the author's website (www.petermorrisbooks.com) for more information.
I can't wait for the subsequent volumes.
— Keith Olbermann, News Anchor, Countdown on MSNBC; co-host, The Dan Patrick Show on ESPN Radio
Peter Morris's A Game of Inches is the one that every serious baseball fan must have.
— Rob Neyer; ESPN the Magazine
A splendidly entertaining book.
— Donald Honig
Truly amazing.
— Rob Neyer; The Griddle
Wonderful baseball anecdotes...a comprehensive volume of who-did-what-first adding a necessary human dimension to baseball facts and figures.
— Philadelphia City Paper
Every season needs a browser's delight of a baseball reference book. Morris' remarkable volume may have set that standard.
— John Marshall; Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Absolutely fantastic.... There is no end to the historical detail, the delightful anecdotes, and the clear explanations.
— Dr. John D. Elgenauer, Super70s.com--Baseball
Offering fascinating information on every page, this is a unique resource for baseball historians and serious fans.
— Choice Reviews
Morris combines learning, precision, and devotion to produce this charming book...This is heaven for fans of the game....
— Library Journal
Morris' remarkable volume may have set [the] standard for this season and several to follow.
— John Marshall; Seattle Post-Intelligencer
It's an everything you ever wanted to know reference source for anyone who truly loves baseball.
— Albany Times Union
Morris gives the scoop on three- and four-man umpiring crews, the history of bats, and more.
— Carol Herwig; USA Today
An encyclopedic effort....interesting observations.
— John Monaghan; Providence Journal
Clear some fresh space on your bookshelves. One of the all-time essential reference works for baseball has...arrived.
— Daniel Gabriel; Elysian Fields Quarterly
Majestic in their detail and exemplary in their dedication to scholarship, these books will leave the reader...exhilarated.
— Choice Reviews
You could do no better than Peter Morris' A Game of Inches, an astonishingly well-researched history.
— Keith Olbermann; Msnbc
A great source for baseball history.
— Iron Mountain, MI; Daily News
Solid piece of near exhaustive research into...crucial aspects of the development of baseball.
— John P. Rossi, La Salle University; The Historian
The most addictive history of baseball you'll ever read