Baseball Imposters : The Dark Side Of Fandom
(2025)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : BookBaby, 2025
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9798317823795 MWT18977681, 18977681
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

For over 40 years, Rob Sheinkopf has collected stories of grown men who falsely claim to have played Major League Baseball. In BASEBALL IMPOSTERS, Sheinkopf explores what author W.P. Kinsella called "The Eddie Scissons Syndrome," inspired by a character in his novel Shoeless Joe, the story behind the movie Field of Dreams. Though the syndrome is named after a fictional character, its reality is disturbingly widespread. Drawing on real-life examples, Sheinkopf recounts these stories, altering names to protect the with a mix of humor, skepticism, and compassion for the families who often only uncover the truth when verifying facts for obituaries, biographies, or personal histories. His fascination with deception in baseball goes back to 1985, when he completed a master's thesis based on interviews with 53 former Major League players who retired before free agency. His research focused on how athletes prepared for life after baseball during a time when most were not financially secure enough to retire comfortably and had to plan second careers. Among those interviews was a high-profile local businessman who proved to be an imposter-someone whose false representation of his past was both puzzling and unsettling. This discovery sparked Sheinkopf's curiosity about why individuals engage in such deception, leading to over four decades of research revealing that imposters are far from rare. Most people are unaware of how widespread this phenomenon is. These stories will surprise, amuse, and enlighten readers, revealing that such deceptions often echo familiar tales told by colleagues, teachers, neighbors, or even family stories that, upon closer inspection, may no longer add up. BASEBALL IMPOSTERS offers a compelling, entertaining, and eye-opening look into a peculiar and persistent phenomenon that extends beyond baseball into the human experience

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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