Roger Angell: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
(56 intermediate revisions by 32 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American writer (1920–2022)}}
{{About|the American sportswriter|the astrophysicist|Roger Angel}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2022}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2022}}
{{Short description|American writer (1920−2022)}}
{{Use American English|date=May 2022}}
{{About|the American author|the astrophysicist J. Roger Angel|Roger Angel}}
{{Infobox writer
{{Infobox writer
| name = Roger Angell
| name = Roger Angell
Line 14: Line 15:
| period =
| period =
| genre = [[Sports journalism]]
| genre = [[Sports journalism]]
| spouse = {{ubl|Evelyn Baker (deceased)<ref name="nytimes.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/25/classified/paid-notice-deaths-nelson-evelyn-baker.html |title=Evelyn Baker Nelson obituary, New York Times, Nov. 25, 1997 |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=November 25, 1997 |accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref>|Carol Rogge (deceased)|Margaret Moorman}}
| spouse = {{ubl|Evelyn Baker <ref name="nytimes.com">{{cite web|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1997/11/25/classified/paid-notice-deaths-nelson-evelyn-baker.html |title=Evelyn Baker Nelson obituary |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=November 25, 1997 |access-date=May 20, 2022}}</ref>|Carol Rogge |Margaret Moorman}}
| partner =
| partner =
| children = 3<ref name=niko>{{cite news |last=Koppel |first=Niko |title=Callie Angell, Authority on Warhol Films, Dies at 62 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/11/arts/artsspecial/11angell.html |newspaper=New York Times |date=May 10, 2010}}</ref>
| children = 3<ref name=niko>{{cite news |last=Koppel |first=Niko |title=Callie Angell, Authority on Warhol Films, Dies at 62 |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/11/arts/artsspecial/11angell.html |newspaper=The New York Times |date=May 10, 2010}}</ref>
| father =
| father =
| parents = {{ubl|[[Ernest Angell]] <br>(father)|[[Katharine Sergeant Angell White]] <br>(mother)}}
| parents = {{ubl|[[Ernest Angell]] (father)|[[Katharine Sergeant Angell White]] <br>(mother)}}
| relatives = {{ubl|[[E. B. White]] (stepfather)|[[Joel White]] (stepbrother)}}
| relatives = {{ubl|[[E. B. White]] (stepfather)|[[Joel White]] (half-brother)}}
| awards = [[PEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing]] (2011)<br/>[[J. G. Taylor Spink Award]] (2014)
| awards = [[PEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing]] (2011)<br/>[[BBWAA Career Excellence Award]] (2014)
| signature =
| signature =
| signature_alt =
| signature_alt =
| portaldisp =
| portaldisp =
}}
}}

'''Roger Angell''' (September 19, 1920 – May 20, 2022) was an American essayist known for his writing on [[Sports journalism|sports]], especially [[baseball]]. He was a regular contributor to ''[[The New Yorker]]'' and was its chief fiction editor for many years.<ref name=Kettmann>{{cite web |first=Steve |last=Kettmann |url=http://archive.salon.com/people/bc/2000/08/29/angell/ |title=Roger Angell |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090113153446/http://archive.salon.com/people/bc/2000/08/29/angell/ |archive-date=January 13, 2009 |website=[[Salon.com]] |date=August 29, 2000}}</ref> He wrote numerous works of fiction, non-fiction, and criticism, and for many years wrote an annual Christmas poem for ''The New Yorker''.<ref name=Kettmann/>
'''Roger Angell''' (September 19, 1920 – May 20, 2022) was an American essayist known for his writing on sports, especially [[baseball]]. He was a regular contributor to ''[[The New Yorker]]'' and was its chief fiction editor for many years.<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/27/sports/baseball/revered-essays-on-the-game-lead-to-a-hall-of-fame-honor-.html</ref><ref name=Kettmann>{{cite web |first=Steve |last=Kettmann |url=http://archive.salon.com/people/bc/2000/08/29/angell/ |title=Roger Angell |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090113153446/http://archive.salon.com/people/bc/2000/08/29/angell/ |archive-date=January 13, 2009 |website=[[Salon.com|Salon]] |date=August 29, 2000}}</ref> He wrote numerous works of fiction, non-fiction, and criticism, and for many years wrote an annual Christmas poem for ''The New Yorker''.<ref name=Kettmann/>


==Early life and education==
==Early life and education==
Born on September 19, 1920 in Manhattan,<ref name="nytimes1">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/20/sports/roger-angell-dead.html|title=Roger Angell, Who Wrote About Baseball With Passion, Dies at 101 |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|last = Garner|first = Dwight|date=May 20, 2022 |accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref><ref name="Reuters-Obit">{{cite news |last1=Trott |first1=Bill |title=Baseball writer Roger Angell dies at 101 |url=https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/baseball-writer-roger-angell-dies-101-2022-05-20/ |access-date=21 May 2022 |work=Reuters |date=20 May 2022 |language=en}}</ref> Angell was the son of [[Katharine Sergeant Angell White]], ''The New Yorker'''s first fiction editor, and the stepson of renowned essayist [[E.&nbsp;B. White]], but he was raised for the most part by his father, [[Ernest Angell]], an attorney who became head of the [[American Civil Liberties Union]].<ref name=lively>{{cite news |title=Roger Angell as lively as ever at age 85 |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/baseball/mlb/wires/05/17/2010.ap.bbo.roger.angell.adv21.1306/ |newspaper=Sports Illustrated |date=May 17, 2006}}</ref><ref name=ulin>{{cite news |last=Ulin |first=David L. |title=Roger Angell on what the dead don't know |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2012/nov/15/entertainment/la-et-jc-roger-angell-new-yorker-20121115 |newspaper=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=November 15, 2012}}</ref><ref name=Influences>{{cite web |first=Chris |last=Smith |url=http://nymag.com/arts/books/profiles/17043/ |title=Influences: Roger Angell |website=[[New York (magazine)|New York]] |date=May 21, 2006}}</ref>
Born on September 19, 1920, in Manhattan, New York,<ref name="nytimes1">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/20/sports/roger-angell-dead.html|title=Roger Angell, Who Wrote About Baseball With Passion, Dies at 101 |newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|last = Garner|first = Dwight|date=May 20, 2022 |accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref><ref name="Reuters-Obit">{{cite news |last1=Trott |first1=Bill |title=Baseball writer Roger Angell dies at 101 |url=https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/baseball-writer-roger-angell-dies-101-2022-05-20/ |access-date=May 21, 2022 |work=Reuters |date=May 20, 2022 |language=en}}</ref> Angell was the son of [[Katharine Sergeant Angell White]], ''The New Yorker''{{'}}s first fiction editor, and the stepson of renowned essayist [[E.&nbsp;B. White]], but he was raised for the most part by his father, [[Ernest Angell]], an attorney who became head of the [[American Civil Liberties Union]].<ref name=lively>{{cite news |title=Roger Angell as lively as ever at age 85 |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/baseball/mlb/wires/05/17/2010.ap.bbo.roger.angell.adv21.1306/ |newspaper=Sports Illustrated |date=May 17, 2006}}</ref><ref name=ulin>{{cite news |last=Ulin |first=David L. |title=Roger Angell on what the dead don't know |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2012/nov/15/entertainment/la-et-jc-roger-angell-new-yorker-20121115 |newspaper=[[Los Angeles Times]] |date=November 15, 2012}}</ref><ref name=Influences>{{cite web |first=Chris |last=Smith |url=http://nymag.com/arts/books/profiles/17043/ |title=Influences: Roger Angell |website=[[New York (magazine)|New York]] |date=May 21, 2006}}</ref>


Angell was a 1938 graduate of the [[Pomfret School]] and attended [[Harvard University]].<ref>{{cite book |first=Richard |last=Orodenker |contribution=Twentieth-Century American Sportswriters |title=Dictionary of Literary Biography |volume=171 |location=Detroit |publisher=Gale |year=1996 |isbn=0-8103-9934-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h8oUAQAAIAAJ&q=Roger+Angell+Pomfret |page=5 |via=Google Books}}</ref> He served in the [[United States Army Air Forces]] during [[World War II]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Verducci |first=Tom |url=https://www.si.com/mlb/2014/07/22/roger-angell-tom-verducci-hall-fame |title=The Passion of Roger Angell: The best baseball writer in America is also a fan - Sports Illustrated |publisher=Si.com |date=July 22, 2014 |accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref>
After graduating in 1938 from the [[Pomfret School]], he attended [[Harvard College]].<ref>{{cite book |first=Richard |last=Orodenker |contribution=Twentieth-Century American Sportswriters |title=Dictionary of Literary Biography |volume=171 |location=Detroit |publisher=Gale |year=1996 |isbn=0-8103-9934-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h8oUAQAAIAAJ&q=Roger+Angell+Pomfret |page=5 |via=Google Books}}</ref> He served in the [[United States Army Air Forces]] during [[World War II]].<ref>{{cite web|last=Verducci |first=Tom |url=https://www.si.com/mlb/2014/07/22/roger-angell-tom-verducci-hall-fame |title=The Passion of Roger Angell: The best baseball writer in America is also a fan - Sports Illustrated |publisher=Si.com |date=July 22, 2014 |accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref>


==Career==
==Career==
Angell's earliest published works were pieces of short fiction and personal narratives. Several of these pieces were collected in ''The Stone Arbor and Other Stories'' (1960) and ''A Day in the Life of Roger Angell'' (1970).<ref name="Bonomo2019">{{cite book |last1=Bonomo |first1=Joe |title=No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing |year=2019 |publisher=U of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-1-4962-1529-1 |pages=21, 76 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NeSKDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA21 |language=en}}</ref> Angell first contributed to ''The New Yorker'' with a short story titled "Three Ladies in the Morning" in March 1944. He continued to contribute to ''The New Yorker'' until 2020.<ref>{{cite magazine |last=Remnick |first=David |date=2022-05-20 |title=Remembering Roger Angell, Hall of Famer |url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/postscript/remembering-roger-angell-hall-of-famer |url-status=live |archive-date=2022-05-21 |access-date=2022-05-21 |magazine=[[The New Yorker]] |publisher= }}</ref> In 1948, Angell was employed at ''[[Holiday (magazine)|Holiday Magazine]]'', a travel magazine that featured literary writers.<ref>{{Cite magazine |url=https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2013/05/holiday-magazine-history |title=The Visual and Writerly Genius of Holiday Magazine |last=Callahan |first=Michael |date=May 2013 |magazine=Vanity Fair |access-date=May 29, 2018 |language=en}}</ref>
In 1948, Angell was employed at ''[[Holiday (magazine)|Holiday Magazine]]'', a travel magazine that featured literary writers.<ref>{{Cite magazine |url=https://www.vanityfair.com/culture/2013/05/holiday-magazine-history |title=The Visual and Writerly Genius of Holiday Magazine |last=Callahan |first=Michael |date=May 2013 |magazine=Vanity Fair |access-date=May 29, 2018 |language=en}}</ref> His earliest published works were pieces of short fiction and personal narratives, several of which were collected in ''The Stone Arbor and Other Stories'' (1960) and ''A Day in the Life of Roger Angell'' (1970).<ref name="Bonomo2019">{{cite book |last1=Bonomo |first1=Joe |title=No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing |year=2019 |publisher=U of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-1-4962-1529-1 |pages=21, 76 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NeSKDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA21 |language=en}}</ref>


Angell first contributed to ''The New Yorker'' while serving in Hawaii as editor of an Air Force magazine; his short story titled "Three Ladies in the Morning" was published in March 1944. He became ''The New Yorker''{{'}}s fiction editor in the 1950s, occupying the same office as his mother,<ref name="AP-Obit"/> and continued to write for the magazine until 2020. "Longevity was actually quite low on his list of accomplishments", wrote his colleague [[David Remnick]]. "He did as much to distinguish ''The New Yorker'' as anyone in the magazine's nearly century-long history. His prose and his editorial judgment left an imprint that's hard to overstate."<ref name=Remnick>{{cite magazine |last=Remnick |first=David |date=May 20, 2022 |title=Remembering Roger Angell, Hall of Famer |url=https://www.newyorker.com/news/postscript/remembering-roger-angell-hall-of-famer |access-date=May 21, 2022 |magazine=[[The New Yorker]] |publisher= }}</ref>
Angell first wrote professionally about baseball in 1962, when [[William Shawn]], editor of ''The New Yorker'', had him travel to Florida to write about [[spring training]].<ref name=Kettmann/><ref name=Influences/> His first two baseball collections were ''The Summer Game'' (1972) and ''Five Seasons: A Baseball Companion'' (1977).<ref name="Bonomo2019a">{{cite book |last1=Bonomo |first1=Joe |title=No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing |date=2019 |publisher=U of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-1-4962-1529-1 |pages=67, 193 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NeSKDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA67 |language=en}}</ref>


He first wrote professionally about baseball in 1962, when ''New Yorker'' editor [[William Shawn]] had him travel to [[Florida]] to write about [[spring training]].<ref name=Kettmann/><ref name=Influences/> His career as a baseball writer coincided with the first season of the [[New York Mets]]. His style of baseball writing was inspired, he said, by [[John Updike]]'s article on [[Ted Williams]]'s farewell to fans at [[Fenway Park]], "Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu". Angell said "John had already supplied my tone, while also seeming to invite me to try for a good sentence now and then, down the line.”<ref name="nytimes1" /> His first two baseball collections were ''The Summer Game'' (1972) and ''Five Seasons'' (1977).<ref name="Bonomo2019a">{{cite book |last1=Bonomo |first1=Joe |title=No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing |date=2019 |publisher=U of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-1-4962-1529-1 |pages=67, 193 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NeSKDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA67 }}</ref> These were followed by ''Late Innings'' (1982) and ''[[Season Ticket: A Baseball Companion]]'' (1988).
Angell has been called the "Poet Laureate of baseball" but he disliked the term.<ref name=Kettmann/><ref name=Influences/> In a review of ''Once More Around the Park'' for the ''Journal of Sport History'', Richard C. Crepeau wrote that "Gone for Good", Angell's essay on the career of [[Steve Blass]],{{#tag:ref|Originally published as "Down the Drain"<ref>{{cite magazine |author=Roger Angell |title=Down the Drain |url=http://archives.newyorker.com/newyorker/1975-06-23/flipbook/042/ |url-access=subscription |magazine=The New Yorker |location=New York |publisher=The New Yorker Magazine, Inc. |date=June 23, 1975 |access-date=February 9, 2021 |pages=42–59}}</ref> |group=lower-alpha}} "may be the best piece that anyone has ever written on baseball or any other sport".<ref>{{cite magazine |first=Richard C. |last=Crepeau |title=Review of ''Once More Around the Park'' |volume=29 |number=3 |url=http://www.la84foundation.org/SportsLibrary/JSH/JSH2002/JSH2903/jsh2903ad.pdf |magazine=Journal of Sport History |pages=510–12 }}</ref> Another essay of Angell, "The Web of the Game", about the epic pitchers' duel between future [[Major League Baseball All-Star game|major-league All-Stars]] (and eventual team-mates) [[Ron Darling]] and [[Frank Viola]] in the [[1981 NCAA Division I Baseball Tournament|1981 NCAA baseball tournament]], was called "perhaps the greatest baseball essay ever penned" by [[ESPN]] journalist [[Ryan McGee]] in 2021.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-sports/baseball/story/_/id/31474244/ron-darling-frank-viola-ncaa-baseball-greatest-game-ever-40-years-on |title=Ron Darling, Frank Viola and NCAA baseball's greatest game ever, 40 years on |first=Ryan |last=McGee |website=ESPN.com |date=May 21, 2021 |accessdate=May 24, 2021}}</ref> Angell contributed commentary to the [[Ken Burns]] series ''[[Baseball (TV series)|Baseball]]'', in 1994.<ref name="Schudel2022">{{cite news |last1=Schudel |first1=Matt |title=Roger Angell, editor, baseball writer at the New Yorker, dies at 101 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2022/05/20/roger-angell-new-yorker-dead/ |newspaper=Washington Post |date=May 20, 2022}}</ref>


Angell has been called the "Poet Laureate of baseball" but he disliked the term.<ref name=Kettmann/><ref name=Influences/> In a review of ''Once More Around the Park'' for the ''Journal of Sport History'', Richard C. Crepeau wrote that "Gone for Good", Angell's essay on the career of [[Steve Blass]],{{#tag:ref|Originally published as "Down the Drain"<ref>{{cite magazine |author=Roger Angell |title=Down the Drain |url=http://archives.newyorker.com/newyorker/1975-06-23/flipbook/042/ |url-access=subscription |magazine=The New Yorker |location=New York |date=June 23, 1975 |access-date=February 9, 2021 |pages=42–59}}</ref> |group=lower-alpha}} "may be the best piece that anyone has ever written on baseball or any other sport".<ref>{{cite magazine |first=Richard C. |last=Crepeau |title=Review of ''Once More Around the Park'' |volume=29 |number=3 |url=http://www.la84foundation.org/SportsLibrary/JSH/JSH2002/JSH2903/jsh2903ad.pdf |magazine=Journal of Sport History |pages=510–12 }}</ref> Another essay of Angell's, "The Web of the Game", about the epic pitchers' duel between future [[Major League Baseball All-Star game|major-league All-Stars]] (and eventual teammates) [[Ron Darling]] and [[Frank Viola]] in the [[1981 NCAA Division I baseball tournament|1981 NCAA baseball tournament]], was called "perhaps the greatest baseball essay ever penned" by [[ESPN]] journalist [[Ryan McGee]] in 2021.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/college-sports/baseball/story/_/id/31474244/ron-darling-frank-viola-ncaa-baseball-greatest-game-ever-40-years-on |title=Ron Darling, Frank Viola and NCAA baseball's greatest game ever, 40 years on |first=Ryan |last=McGee |website=ESPN.com |date=May 21, 2021 |accessdate=May 24, 2021}}</ref> Angell contributed commentary to the [[Ken Burns]] series ''[[Baseball (TV series)|Baseball]]'', in 1994.<ref name="Schudel2022">{{cite news |last1=Schudel |first1=Matt |title=Roger Angell, editor, baseball writer at the New Yorker, dies at 101 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/obituaries/2022/05/20/roger-angell-new-yorker-dead/ |newspaper=Washington Post |date=May 20, 2022}}</ref>
==Personal life and death==
Angell had two daughters, Callie and Alice, with his first wife Evelyn,<ref name="nytimes.com"/> and a son, John Henry, with Carol. Callie, an authority on the [[Andy Warhol#Films|films]] of [[Andy Warhol]], died by suicide on May 5, 2010, in [[Manhattan]], where she worked as a curator at the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]]; she was 62. In a 2014 essay, he mentioned her death – "the oceanic force and mystery of that event" – and his struggle to comprehend that "a beautiful daughter of mine, my oldest child, had ended her life".<ref name="This Old Man">{{Cite news |url=http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/02/17/old-man-3 |title=This Old Man |last=Angell |first=Roger |date=February 24, 2014 |newspaper=The New Yorker |issn=0028-792X |access-date=March 2, 2016 }}</ref> Alice lived in [[Portland, Maine]] and died from cancer on February 2, 2019,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://obituaries.pressherald.com/obituaries/mainetoday-pressherald/obituary.aspx?n=alice-angell&pid=191464796 |title=Alice Angell |department=Obituaries |newspaper=Press Herald}}</ref> and John Henry lives in [[Portland, Oregon]].<ref name=niko/>


==Personal life and death==
His second wife, Carol Rogge Angell, to whom he was married for 48 years, died on April 10, 2012, of [[metastatic breast cancer]] at the age of 73.<ref>{{cite news |title=Paid Notice: Deaths, Angell, Carol Rogge |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A06EFDD1F3AF937A25757C0A9649D8B63 |access-date=February 27, 2013 |newspaper=New York Times |date=April 14, 2012}}</ref> He married his third wife Margaret (Peggy) Moorman in 2014.<ref name="AP-Obit">{{cite news |last1=Italie |first1=Hillel |title=Longtime New Yorker writer, editor Roger Angell dies |url=https://apnews.com/article/sports-eb-white-garrison-keillor-roger-angell-62f402f5f43d38df6804e51e55bfcd2f |access-date=21 May 2022 |publisher=Associated Press |date=20 May 2022 |quote=Angell was married three times, most recently to Margaret Moorman.}}</ref><ref name="MarkSinger20200905">{{cite magazine |last1=Singer |first1=Mark |title=Roger Angell at a Hundred |magazine=The New Yorker |date=5 September 2020 |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/09/14/roger-angell-at-a-hundred |access-date=21 May 2022 |quote=...Roger Angell has spent his one-hundredth summer in customary fashion. In late June, he and his wife, Peggy Moorman, drove a spring-chicken ’97 Volvo wagon from their covid refuge, in the Catskills, to Brooklin, Maine ... He recalls a threat from Carol as her death neared: “If you haven’t found someone else by a year after I’m gone I’ll come back and haunt you. He obliged in the summer of 2014, when he and Moorman married a week or so before he was inducted into the writer’s section of the Baseball Hall of Fame...}}</ref>
Angell was married three times. He had two daughters, Callie and Alice, with his first wife, Evelyn,<ref name="nytimes.com"/> and a son, John Henry, with his second wife, Carol Rogge Angell. After 48 years of marriage, Carol Angell died on April 10, 2012, at the age of 73 of [[metastatic breast cancer]].<ref>{{cite news |title=Paid Notice: Deaths, Angell, Carol Rogge |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A06EFDD1F3AF937A25757C0A9649D8B63 |access-date=February 27, 2013 |newspaper=New York Times |date=April 14, 2012}}</ref> In 2014, he married Margaret (Peggy) Moorman.<ref name="AP-Obit">{{cite news |last1=Italie |first1=Hillel |title=Longtime New Yorker writer, editor Roger Angell dies |url=https://apnews.com/article/sports-eb-white-garrison-keillor-roger-angell-62f402f5f43d38df6804e51e55bfcd2f |access-date=July 11, 2022 |publisher=Associated Press |date=May 20, 2022 }}</ref><ref name="MarkSinger20200905">{{cite magazine |last1=Singer |first1=Mark |title=Roger Angell at a Hundred |magazine=The New Yorker |date=September 5, 2020 |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/09/14/roger-angell-at-a-hundred |access-date=May 21, 2022 |quote=He recalls a threat from Carol as her death neared: 'If you haven't found someone else by a year after I'm gone I'll come back and haunt you.' He obliged in the summer of 2014, when he and Moorman married a week or so before he was inducted into the writer’s section of the Baseball Hall of Fame...}}</ref> His daughter Callie, an authority on the [[Andy Warhol#Films|films]] of [[Andy Warhol]], died by suicide on May 5, 2010, in [[Manhattan]], where she worked as a curator at the [[Whitney Museum of American Art]]; she was 62. In a 2014 essay, he mentioned her death – "the oceanic force and mystery of that event" – and his struggle to comprehend that "a beautiful daughter of mine, my oldest child, had ended her life".<ref name="This Old Man">{{Cite news |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/02/17/old-man-3 |title=This Old Man |last=Angell |first=Roger |date=February 24, 2014 |newspaper=The New Yorker |issn=0028-792X |access-date=March 2, 2016 }}</ref>


Angell died of [[congestive heart failure]] at his home in Manhattan on May 20, 2022, at the age of 101.<ref name="nytimes1" /><ref name="AP-Obit" /><ref name="Reuters-Obit" />
Angell died of [[congestive heart failure]] at his home in Manhattan on May 20, 2022, at the age of 101.<ref name="nytimes1" /><ref name="AP-Obit" /><ref name="Reuters-Obit" />


== Awards ==
== Awards and legacy ==
David Remnick said, “I’m not sure there’s ever been a writer so strong, and an editor so important, all at once, at a magazine since the days of [[H.L. Mencken]] running ''[[The American Mercury]]'',” adding “Roger was a vigorous editor, and an intellect with broad tastes.”<ref name="nytimes1" /> Per his ''[[New York Times]]'' obituary, "Like his mother, Mr. Angell became a New Yorker fiction editor, discovering and nurturing writers, including [[Ann Beattie]], [[Bobbie Ann Mason]] and [[Garrison Keillor]]. For a while he occupied his mother’s old office — an experience, he told an interviewer, that was 'the weirdest thing in the world.' He also worked closely with writers like [[Vladimir Nabokov]], [[John Updike]], [[Donald Barthelme]], [[Ruth Jhabvala]] and [[V.S. Pritchett]]."<ref name="nytimes1" />
Angell received a number of awards for his writing, including the [[George Polk Awards|George Polk Award]] for Commentary in 1980,<ref name=nyk>{{cite magazine |title=Roger Angell |url=http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/bios/roger_angell/search?contributorName=roger%20angell |department=Contributor Biography |magazine=The New Yorker}}</ref> the ''[[Kenyon Review]]'' Award for Literary Achievement in 2005 along with [[Umberto Eco]],<ref name=kenyon>{{cite web |title=Roger Angell and Umberto Eco |url=http://www.kenyonreview.org/programs/kenyon-review-award-for-literary-achievement/roger-angell-and-umberto-eco/ |publisher=The Kenyon Review |access-date=February 27, 2013}}</ref> and the inaugural [[PEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing]] in 2011.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-2011-pen-honorees-in-the-new-yorker|title=The 2011 PEN Honorees in The New Yorker|first=Condé|last=Nast|date=August 10, 2011|magazine=The New Yorker}}</ref>


Angell received a number of awards for his writing, including the [[George Polk Awards|George Polk Award]] for Commentary in 1980,<ref name=nyk>{{cite magazine |title=Roger Angell |url=http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/bios/roger_angell/search?contributorName=roger%20angell |department=Contributor Biography |magazine=The New Yorker}}</ref> the ''[[Kenyon Review]]'' Award for Literary Achievement in 2005 along with [[Umberto Eco]],<ref name=kenyon>{{cite web |title=Roger Angell and Umberto Eco |url=http://www.kenyonreview.org/programs/kenyon-review-award-for-literary-achievement/roger-angell-and-umberto-eco/ |publisher=The Kenyon Review |access-date=February 27, 2013}}</ref> and the inaugural [[PEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing]] in 2011.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-2011-pen-honorees-in-the-new-yorker|title=The 2011 PEN Honorees in The New Yorker|date=August 10, 2011|magazine=The New Yorker}}</ref> He was a long-time ex-officio member of the council of the [[Authors Guild]],<ref name=nyk /> and was elected a Fellow of the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]] in 2007.<ref name=AAAS>{{cite web |title=Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter A |url=http://www.amacad.org/publications/BookofMembers/ChapterA.pdf |publisher=American Academy of Arts and Sciences |access-date=April 18, 2011}}</ref> His article ''This Old Man'' in ''The New Yorker''<ref name="This Old Man" /> on his "challenges and joys of being 93"<ref name="Nieman2015">{{cite web |title=Checking out the National Magazine Award Winners |url=https://niemanreports.org/stories/checking-out-the-national-magazine-award-winners/ |website=[[Nieman Foundation for Journalism|Nieman Reports]] |access-date=May 21, 2022 |date=February 3, 2015}}</ref> garnered the [[National Magazine Awards#Essays and Criticism|National Magazine Award for Essays and Criticism]] in 2015.<ref>{{cite web |title=Winners and Finalists |url=http://www.magazine.org/asme/national-magazine-awards/winners-finalists/recent |website=National Magazine Award 2015 |publisher=[[American Society of Magazine Editors]] |access-date=May 21, 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924045249/http://www.magazine.org:80/asme/national-magazine-awards/winners-finalists/recent |archive-date=September 24, 2015 |format=web.archive.org |url-status=dead}}</ref>
Angell was elected a Fellow of the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]] in 2007<ref name=AAAS>{{cite web |title=Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter A |url=http://www.amacad.org/publications/BookofMembers/ChapterA.pdf |publisher=American Academy of Arts and Sciences |access-date=April 18, 2011}}</ref> and was a long-time ex-officio member of the council of the [[Authors Guild]].<ref name=nyk /> He was inducted into the [[Baseball Reliquary]]'s [[Baseball Reliquary#Shrine of the Eternals|Shrine of the Eternals]] in 2010.<ref name="BRSOTE Inductees">[http://www.baseballreliquary.org/awards/shrine-of-the-eternals/shrine-of-the-eternals-electees "Shrine of the Eternals – Inductees"]. Baseball Reliquary. Retrieved August 14, 2019.</ref>
He was inducted into the [[Baseball Reliquary]]'s [[Baseball Reliquary#Shrine of the Eternals|Shrine of the Eternals]] in 2010,<ref name="BRSOTE Inductees">{{cite web |url=http://www.baseballreliquary.org/awards/shrine-of-the-eternals/shrine-of-the-eternals-electees |title=Shrine of the Eternals – Inductees |website=Baseball Reliquary |access-date=August 14, 2019 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://baseballroundtable.com/the-baseball-reliquary/ |title=The Baseball Reliquary |website=Baseball Roundtable |access-date=June 13, 2022 }}</ref> and he was the 2014 recipient of the J. G. Taylor Spink Award, now known as the [[BBWAA Career Excellence Award]], of the [[Baseball Writers' Association of America]];<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/10114111/roger-angell-wins-spink-award-baseball-writing|title=Roger Angell wins Spink Award|date=December 10, 2013|website=ESPN.com |agency=AP}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url=https://www.newyorker.com/sports/sporting-scene/roger-angell-baseball-hall-fame |title=Roger Angell at the Baseball Hall of Fame |magazine=The New Yorker |date=August 4, 2014 }}</ref> despite being a ''New Yorker'' writer, he was nominated by the San Francisco–Oakland chapter.<ref>{{cite news |first=Susan |last=Slusser |url=https://www.sfchronicle.com/sports/giants/article/How-Bay-Area-baseball-scribes-helped-put-Roger-17203949.php |title=How Bay Area baseball scribes helped put Roger Angell in the Hall of Fame |newspaper=San Francisco Chronicle |date=May 27, 2022 }}</ref> In 2015 he was inducted into the [[American Academy of Arts and Letters]],<ref>{{cite web |url=https://artsandletters.org/pressrelease/2015-new-members/ |title=2015 Newly Elected Members |publisher=American Academy of Arts and Letters |access-date=June 13, 2022 }}</ref> a unique combination with the [[National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum|Baseball Hall of Fame]].<ref name=Remnick/>


[[Ross Douthat]] named ''Late Innings'', ''The Summer Game'' and ''Five Seasons'' as influences: "I can’t point to any specific philosophy or perspective on contemporary America that I arrived at from reading, re-reading, and re-re-reading Angell’s luminous accounts of baseball seasons past. But if I were to make a list of writers who taught me how to write, he’d be near the top of it."<ref>{{cite news| author=[[Ross Douthat]]| title=The Influential Books Game| work=[[The New York Times]]| date=March 25, 2010| url=https://archive.nytimes.com/douthat.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/the-influential-books-game/}}</ref> [[Michael Chabon]] names Angell and [[Jan Morris]] as "two of my favorite authors who are primarily writers of non-fiction."<ref>{{cite web|title = It Changed My Life |url= http://www.michaelchabon.com/archives/2005/03/it_changed_my_l.html |archive-url=https://archive.today/20060720152012/http://www.michaelchabon.com/archives/2005/03/it_changed_my_l.html |url-status= dead |archive-date=20 July 2006 |last=Chabon |first=Michael |date=July 2006 |work=michaelchabon.com |access-date=12 February 2009}}</ref>
Angell was named the 2014 recipient of the [[J. G. Taylor Spink Award]] by the [[Baseball Writers' Association of America]] on December 10, 2013.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.espn.com/mlb/story/_/id/10114111/roger-angell-wins-spink-award-baseball-writing|title=New Yorker writer Angell wins Spink Award|date=December 10, 2013|website=ESPN.com}}</ref>


Angell has four pieces excerpted in the [[Library of America]] volume ''Baseball: A Literary Anthology'', more than any other author. Editor [[Nicholas Dawidoff]] quotes a letter Angell's stepfather, [[E. B. White]], wrote to Angell: "It's new and exciting to have someone exploring baseball at the depth you have ventured into." Dawidoff writes: <blockquote>Angell's achievement was to turn quotidian baseball writing into belles lettres. In so doing he became the preeminent baseball writer of our era, a generous, appreciative, meticulous observer whose descriptions of the game are set forth with grace, brio, and wit. (Who else would refer to "the vast pastel conch of Dodger Stadium"?) Angell has Wagnerian range (Honus, that is); he is a master capable of vivid excursions into the profile (see Bob Gibson); he can make games he never saw breathtaking in their excitement (witness the 1986 National League playoffs); and he often reflects on matters philosophical ("The Interior Stadium" is the consummate baseball essay). He can write at length and, what is often more difficult, can write in brief.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dawidoff |first=Nicholas |title=Baseball: A Literary Anthology |publisher=[[Library of America]] |year=2002 |pages=413}}</ref></blockquote>
His article ''This Old Man'' in ''The New Yorker''<ref name="This Old Man" /> on his "challenges and joys of being 93"<ref name="Nieman2015">{{cite web |title=Checking out the National Magazine Award Winners |url=https://niemanreports.org/stories/checking-out-the-national-magazine-award-winners/ |website=[[Nieman Foundation for Journalism|Nieman Reports]] |access-date=21 May 2022 |date=February 3, 2015}}</ref> garnered the [[National Magazine Awards#Essays and Criticism|National Magazine Award for Essays and Criticism]] in 2015.<ref>{{cite web |title=Winners and Finalists |url=http://www.magazine.org/asme/national-magazine-awards/winners-finalists/recent |website=National Magazine Award 2015 |publisher=[[American Society of Magazine Editors]] |access-date=21 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924045249/http://www.magazine.org:80/asme/national-magazine-awards/winners-finalists/recent |archive-date=September 24, 2015 |format=web.archive.org |url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
{{Main|Roger Angell bibliography}}
{{Main|Roger Angell bibliography}}
In 2019, [[University of Nebraska Press]] published ''No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing'', a book about Angell's career written by [[Joe Bonomo]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/a-one-man-archive-of-baseball-history/ |title=A One-Man Archive of Baseball History |publisher=Lareviewofbooks.org |date= June 23, 2019|accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref>
In 2019, [[University of Nebraska Press]] published ''No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing'', a book about Angell's career, written by [[Joe Bonomo]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://lareviewofbooks.org/article/a-one-man-archive-of-baseball-history/ |title=A One-Man Archive of Baseball History |publisher=Lareviewofbooks.org |date= June 23, 2019|accessdate=May 20, 2022}}</ref>


==Notes==
==Notes==
Line 66: Line 70:


==External links==
==External links==
* {{cite magazine |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/baseball/mlb/wires/05/17/2010.ap.bbo.roger.angell.adv21.1306/ |title=Roger Angell as lively as ever at age 85 |department=profile |magazine=[[Sports Illustrated]] |date=May 17, 2006}}
* {{Cite magazine |title=Roger Angell as lively as ever at age 85 |url=http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2006/baseball/mlb/wires/05/17/2010.ap.bbo.roger.angell.adv21.1306/ |department=Profile |magazine=[[Sports Illustrated]] |date=May 17, 2006}}
* {{cite magazine |url=http://www.newyorker.com/contributors/roger-angell |title=Roger Angell's bio and articles/stories |magazine=The New Yorker}}
* {{Cite magazine |title=Roger Angell's bio and articles/stories |url=http://www.newyorker.com/contributors/roger-angell |magazine=The New Yorker}}
* {{LCAuth|n50024873|Roger Angell|24|}}


{{2014 Baseball HOF}}
{{2014 Baseball HOF}}
Line 84: Line 87:
[[Category:21st-century American male writers]]
[[Category:21st-century American male writers]]
[[Category:21st-century American poets]]
[[Category:21st-century American poets]]
[[Category:American centenarians]]
[[Category:American men centenarians]]
[[Category:American male essayists]]
[[Category:American male essayists]]
[[Category:American male short story writers]]
[[Category:American male short story writers]]
Line 93: Line 96:
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Harvard College alumni]]
[[Category:Harvard College alumni]]
[[Category:Men centenarians]]
[[Category:Military personnel from New York City]]
[[Category:Military personnel from New York City]]
[[Category:The New Yorker people]]
[[Category:Pomfret School alumni]]
[[Category:Pomfret School alumni]]
[[Category:Sportswriters from New York (state)]]
[[Category:Sportswriters from New York (state)]]
[[Category:The New Yorker people]]
[[Category:United States Army Air Forces personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:United States Army Air Forces personnel of World War II]]
[[Category:Writers from Manhattan]]
[[Category:Writers from Manhattan]]
[[Category:Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters]]

Revision as of 14:51, 1 May 2024

Roger Angell
Angell in 2015
Angell in 2015
Born(1920-09-19)September 19, 1920
New York City, U.S.
DiedMay 20, 2022(2022-05-20) (aged 101)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationAuthor
Alma materHarvard University
GenreSports journalism
Notable awardsPEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing (2011)
BBWAA Career Excellence Award (2014)
Spouse
  • Evelyn Baker [1]
  • Carol Rogge
  • Margaret Moorman
Children3[2]
Parents
Relatives

Roger Angell (September 19, 1920 – May 20, 2022) was an American essayist known for his writing on sports, especially baseball. He was a regular contributor to The New Yorker and was its chief fiction editor for many years.[3][4] He wrote numerous works of fiction, non-fiction, and criticism, and for many years wrote an annual Christmas poem for The New Yorker.[4]

Early life and education

Born on September 19, 1920, in Manhattan, New York,[5][6] Angell was the son of Katharine Sergeant Angell White, The New Yorker's first fiction editor, and the stepson of renowned essayist E. B. White, but he was raised for the most part by his father, Ernest Angell, an attorney who became head of the American Civil Liberties Union.[7][8][9]

After graduating in 1938 from the Pomfret School, he attended Harvard College.[10] He served in the United States Army Air Forces during World War II.[11]

Career

In 1948, Angell was employed at Holiday Magazine, a travel magazine that featured literary writers.[12] His earliest published works were pieces of short fiction and personal narratives, several of which were collected in The Stone Arbor and Other Stories (1960) and A Day in the Life of Roger Angell (1970).[13]

Angell first contributed to The New Yorker while serving in Hawaii as editor of an Air Force magazine; his short story titled "Three Ladies in the Morning" was published in March 1944. He became The New Yorker's fiction editor in the 1950s, occupying the same office as his mother,[14] and continued to write for the magazine until 2020. "Longevity was actually quite low on his list of accomplishments", wrote his colleague David Remnick. "He did as much to distinguish The New Yorker as anyone in the magazine's nearly century-long history. His prose and his editorial judgment left an imprint that's hard to overstate."[15]

He first wrote professionally about baseball in 1962, when New Yorker editor William Shawn had him travel to Florida to write about spring training.[4][9] His career as a baseball writer coincided with the first season of the New York Mets. His style of baseball writing was inspired, he said, by John Updike's article on Ted Williams's farewell to fans at Fenway Park, "Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu". Angell said "John had already supplied my tone, while also seeming to invite me to try for a good sentence now and then, down the line.”[5] His first two baseball collections were The Summer Game (1972) and Five Seasons (1977).[16] These were followed by Late Innings (1982) and Season Ticket: A Baseball Companion (1988).

Angell has been called the "Poet Laureate of baseball" but he disliked the term.[4][9] In a review of Once More Around the Park for the Journal of Sport History, Richard C. Crepeau wrote that "Gone for Good", Angell's essay on the career of Steve Blass,[a] "may be the best piece that anyone has ever written on baseball or any other sport".[18] Another essay of Angell's, "The Web of the Game", about the epic pitchers' duel between future major-league All-Stars (and eventual teammates) Ron Darling and Frank Viola in the 1981 NCAA baseball tournament, was called "perhaps the greatest baseball essay ever penned" by ESPN journalist Ryan McGee in 2021.[19] Angell contributed commentary to the Ken Burns series Baseball, in 1994.[20]

Personal life and death

Angell was married three times. He had two daughters, Callie and Alice, with his first wife, Evelyn,[1] and a son, John Henry, with his second wife, Carol Rogge Angell. After 48 years of marriage, Carol Angell died on April 10, 2012, at the age of 73 of metastatic breast cancer.[21] In 2014, he married Margaret (Peggy) Moorman.[14][22] His daughter Callie, an authority on the films of Andy Warhol, died by suicide on May 5, 2010, in Manhattan, where she worked as a curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art; she was 62. In a 2014 essay, he mentioned her death – "the oceanic force and mystery of that event" – and his struggle to comprehend that "a beautiful daughter of mine, my oldest child, had ended her life".[23]

Angell died of congestive heart failure at his home in Manhattan on May 20, 2022, at the age of 101.[5][14][6]

Awards and legacy

David Remnick said, “I’m not sure there’s ever been a writer so strong, and an editor so important, all at once, at a magazine since the days of H.L. Mencken running The American Mercury,” adding “Roger was a vigorous editor, and an intellect with broad tastes.”[5] Per his New York Times obituary, "Like his mother, Mr. Angell became a New Yorker fiction editor, discovering and nurturing writers, including Ann Beattie, Bobbie Ann Mason and Garrison Keillor. For a while he occupied his mother’s old office — an experience, he told an interviewer, that was 'the weirdest thing in the world.' He also worked closely with writers like Vladimir Nabokov, John Updike, Donald Barthelme, Ruth Jhabvala and V.S. Pritchett."[5]

Angell received a number of awards for his writing, including the George Polk Award for Commentary in 1980,[24] the Kenyon Review Award for Literary Achievement in 2005 along with Umberto Eco,[25] and the inaugural PEN/ESPN Lifetime Achievement Award for Literary Sports Writing in 2011.[26] He was a long-time ex-officio member of the council of the Authors Guild,[24] and was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2007.[27] His article This Old Man in The New Yorker[23] on his "challenges and joys of being 93"[28] garnered the National Magazine Award for Essays and Criticism in 2015.[29]

He was inducted into the Baseball Reliquary's Shrine of the Eternals in 2010,[30][31] and he was the 2014 recipient of the J. G. Taylor Spink Award, now known as the BBWAA Career Excellence Award, of the Baseball Writers' Association of America;[32][33] despite being a New Yorker writer, he was nominated by the San Francisco–Oakland chapter.[34] In 2015 he was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters,[35] a unique combination with the Baseball Hall of Fame.[15]

Ross Douthat named Late Innings, The Summer Game and Five Seasons as influences: "I can’t point to any specific philosophy or perspective on contemporary America that I arrived at from reading, re-reading, and re-re-reading Angell’s luminous accounts of baseball seasons past. But if I were to make a list of writers who taught me how to write, he’d be near the top of it."[36] Michael Chabon names Angell and Jan Morris as "two of my favorite authors who are primarily writers of non-fiction."[37]

Angell has four pieces excerpted in the Library of America volume Baseball: A Literary Anthology, more than any other author. Editor Nicholas Dawidoff quotes a letter Angell's stepfather, E. B. White, wrote to Angell: "It's new and exciting to have someone exploring baseball at the depth you have ventured into." Dawidoff writes:

Angell's achievement was to turn quotidian baseball writing into belles lettres. In so doing he became the preeminent baseball writer of our era, a generous, appreciative, meticulous observer whose descriptions of the game are set forth with grace, brio, and wit. (Who else would refer to "the vast pastel conch of Dodger Stadium"?) Angell has Wagnerian range (Honus, that is); he is a master capable of vivid excursions into the profile (see Bob Gibson); he can make games he never saw breathtaking in their excitement (witness the 1986 National League playoffs); and he often reflects on matters philosophical ("The Interior Stadium" is the consummate baseball essay). He can write at length and, what is often more difficult, can write in brief.[38]

Bibliography

In 2019, University of Nebraska Press published No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing, a book about Angell's career, written by Joe Bonomo.[39]

Notes

  1. ^ Originally published as "Down the Drain"[17]

References

  1. ^ a b "Evelyn Baker Nelson obituary". The New York Times. November 25, 1997. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  2. ^ Koppel, Niko (May 10, 2010). "Callie Angell, Authority on Warhol Films, Dies at 62". The New York Times.
  3. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2014/07/27/sports/baseball/revered-essays-on-the-game-lead-to-a-hall-of-fame-honor-.html
  4. ^ a b c d Kettmann, Steve (August 29, 2000). "Roger Angell". Salon. Archived from the original on January 13, 2009.
  5. ^ a b c d e Garner, Dwight (May 20, 2022). "Roger Angell, Who Wrote About Baseball With Passion, Dies at 101". The New York Times. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Trott, Bill (May 20, 2022). "Baseball writer Roger Angell dies at 101". Reuters. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  7. ^ "Roger Angell as lively as ever at age 85". Sports Illustrated. May 17, 2006.
  8. ^ Ulin, David L. (November 15, 2012). "Roger Angell on what the dead don't know". Los Angeles Times.
  9. ^ a b c Smith, Chris (May 21, 2006). "Influences: Roger Angell". New York.
  10. ^ Orodenker, Richard (1996). "Twentieth-Century American Sportswriters". Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol. 171. Detroit: Gale. p. 5. ISBN 0-8103-9934-2 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Verducci, Tom (July 22, 2014). "The Passion of Roger Angell: The best baseball writer in America is also a fan - Sports Illustrated". Si.com. Retrieved May 20, 2022.
  12. ^ Callahan, Michael (May 2013). "The Visual and Writerly Genius of Holiday Magazine". Vanity Fair. Retrieved May 29, 2018.
  13. ^ Bonomo, Joe (2019). No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 21, 76. ISBN 978-1-4962-1529-1.
  14. ^ a b c Italie, Hillel (May 20, 2022). "Longtime New Yorker writer, editor Roger Angell dies". Associated Press. Retrieved July 11, 2022.
  15. ^ a b Remnick, David (May 20, 2022). "Remembering Roger Angell, Hall of Famer". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  16. ^ Bonomo, Joe (2019). No Place I Would Rather Be: Roger Angell and a Life in Baseball Writing. U of Nebraska Press. pp. 67, 193. ISBN 978-1-4962-1529-1.
  17. ^ Roger Angell (June 23, 1975). "Down the Drain". The New Yorker. New York. pp. 42–59. Retrieved February 9, 2021.
  18. ^ Crepeau, Richard C. "Review of Once More Around the Park" (PDF). Journal of Sport History. Vol. 29, no. 3. pp. 510–12.
  19. ^ McGee, Ryan (May 21, 2021). "Ron Darling, Frank Viola and NCAA baseball's greatest game ever, 40 years on". ESPN.com. Retrieved May 24, 2021.
  20. ^ Schudel, Matt (May 20, 2022). "Roger Angell, editor, baseball writer at the New Yorker, dies at 101". Washington Post.
  21. ^ "Paid Notice: Deaths, Angell, Carol Rogge". New York Times. April 14, 2012. Retrieved February 27, 2013.
  22. ^ Singer, Mark (September 5, 2020). "Roger Angell at a Hundred". The New Yorker. Retrieved May 21, 2022. He recalls a threat from Carol as her death neared: 'If you haven't found someone else by a year after I'm gone I'll come back and haunt you.' He obliged in the summer of 2014, when he and Moorman married a week or so before he was inducted into the writer's section of the Baseball Hall of Fame...
  23. ^ a b Angell, Roger (February 24, 2014). "This Old Man". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved March 2, 2016.
  24. ^ a b "Roger Angell". Contributor Biography. The New Yorker.
  25. ^ "Roger Angell and Umberto Eco". The Kenyon Review. Retrieved February 27, 2013.
  26. ^ "The 2011 PEN Honorees in The New Yorker". The New Yorker. August 10, 2011.
  27. ^ "Book of Members, 1780-2010: Chapter A" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved April 18, 2011.
  28. ^ "Checking out the National Magazine Award Winners". Nieman Reports. February 3, 2015. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  29. ^ "Winners and Finalists". National Magazine Award 2015. American Society of Magazine Editors. Archived from the original (web.archive.org) on September 24, 2015. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
  30. ^ "Shrine of the Eternals – Inductees". Baseball Reliquary. Retrieved August 14, 2019.
  31. ^ "The Baseball Reliquary". Baseball Roundtable. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  32. ^ "Roger Angell wins Spink Award". ESPN.com. AP. December 10, 2013.
  33. ^ "Roger Angell at the Baseball Hall of Fame". The New Yorker. August 4, 2014.
  34. ^ Slusser, Susan (May 27, 2022). "How Bay Area baseball scribes helped put Roger Angell in the Hall of Fame". San Francisco Chronicle.
  35. ^ "2015 Newly Elected Members". American Academy of Arts and Letters. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
  36. ^ Ross Douthat (March 25, 2010). "The Influential Books Game". The New York Times.
  37. ^ Chabon, Michael (July 2006). "It Changed My Life". michaelchabon.com. Archived from the original on July 20, 2006. Retrieved February 12, 2009.
  38. ^ Dawidoff, Nicholas (2002). Baseball: A Literary Anthology. Library of America. p. 413.
  39. ^ "A One-Man Archive of Baseball History". Lareviewofbooks.org. June 23, 2019. Retrieved May 20, 2022.

External links