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Allen Barra

Allen Barra is a sports journalist who writes regularly for The Wall Street Journal. He formerly served as an editor for American Heritage, where he wrote about 20th century sports and popular culture. His 2009 book, Yogi Berra: Eternal Yankee, was followed by Rickwood Field: A Century in America's Oldest Ballpark in 2010.

Articles by this Author

Team, May/June 1998 | Vol. 49, No. 3

"WEB ONLY STORIES" BY THIS CONTRIBUTOR

Scores of films have been made about the Battle of the Little Bighorn—or Custer’s Last Stand, as it is popularly known. According to historians, the number of books written on the campaign and its major participants, especially Custer and Crazy Horse, long ago passed the 1,000 mark. Writer James…
Paul Giamatti and Laura Linney as John and Abigail Adams in HBO's John Adams John Adams, HBO’s seven part, $100 million miniseries, is more than ambitious. In scope and depth, it is the most far-reaching production ever made on the American Revolution, though given its predecessors—the offensively…
CBS brings the Old West to life in Comanche Moon (©2007. CBS Broadcasting, Inc.) Successful literary collaborations are rare. The few exceptions—Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner (The Gilded Age), Charles Nordhoff and James Norman Hall (Mutiny On The Bounty), Lou Abbott and Bud Costello (“Who’s…
Tom Hanks and Philip Seymour Hoffman in Charlie Wilson’s War. Just when you thought Hollywood had forgotten how to make outrageously funny political satire, along comes director Mike Nichols with Charlie Wilson’s War, which, at a svelte 97 minutes—including credits—is the tangiest refreshment of…
Raymond Chandler is the most influential mystery writer since Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. His leading advocates, including W. H. Auden, Clive James, and even, grudgingly, Edmund Wilson, have argued that he transcends the genre of detective fiction and that his books should be simply considered…
Ridley Scott’s American Gangster is based on such a remarkable real-life character that it’s amazing the story took so long to get to the big screen. Frank Lucas, played by Denzel Washington, was the second great black crime figure in America, the first being his mentor, the legendary Harlem…
The War: An Intimate History, 1941–1945, by Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns (Knopf, 480 pages, $50), is the companion volume to the Ken Burns documentary series about World War II that airs later this month. It looks, at first glance, like it’s also the coffee table book of the season. It is, but…
Wild Bill Hickok, that legendary hero of the West, was shot dead in Deadwood, South Dakota, 131 years ago today, on August 2, 1876. Jeff Morey is one of the leading experts on him. In fact, Morey is one of the leading researchers on the American frontier in general. He was historical adviser for…
If horror films have lost their sting in recent years, it’s in large part because the easy availability of photographic equipment has put genuine horror so much in front of us that fiction seems tame by comparison. The films we saw on television of actual terrified fleeing peasants will linger in…
“Jesse James was a lad who killed many a man.” So went the opening line of the popular song, author unknown, that did much to spread the legend of Jesse Woodson James after his death on April 3, 1882—125 years ago today. Jesse and his brother Frank were already legends in their own time, but the…