This book had a lot of potential that it sadly did not live up to. There are both strengths and weaknesses with this tome which I will address below:
Strengths: This book is a biography of Bob Schoenbachler and Jim Kittilsby, who both worked in the front office of the Seattle Pilots and Milwaukee Brewers during the 1969 and 1970 seasons. Their voices resonate loud and clear through this work, and considering their positions, they are important voices indeed. There is more substance than a mere wikipedia entry, and we do see some colorful episodes with other bigger named players in the game. We also get a small glimpse at Bud Selig before he became the Commissioner of Baseball, and learn about his passion for baseball history and his other attempts at getting or keeping major league baseball in Milwaukee.
The supplemental research was above average. As a historian reading historical works, I always look at how well researched the subject is. While the Schoenbachler and Kittilsby interviews are the primary source materials (which is good), the remaining secondary source materials are somewhat weak. A few newspaper or encyclopedia entries here and there but spotty otherwise.
Weaknesses: The writing was poor. There were too many "words" that were "set off" in "quotation marks" that did not need to be, and the sentence structures were clumsy. There was too much repetition in the book (by page 99, we are familiar with the fact that Schoenbachler was 19 years old with no job four years earlier and had worked as the comptroller for two start up professional baseball teams). The editors needed to be fired because they didn't do their job well enough.
Also - there was very little to do with the actual playing of baseball. This is more of a neutral point. The subtitle is "Insiders Reveal How the Ill-Fated Seattle Pilots Got Played into Bankruptcy in One Year" so at least Allen stayed true to the title. Sadly, a little too true. After reading the book, I still had to look up the rosters of the 1969 Seattle Pilots and 1970 Milwaukee Brewers. The only two players I recognized from reading the work were Miguel Fuentes and Gorman Thomas (I remember watching Thomas play during his Brewers career in the 1970s and 80s), and, of course, Lou Pinella after his trade to Kansas City.
Overall, this is one of those books that I don't mind having on the bookshelf. It was an okay read. Don't rush out to the bookstores to buy this, but don't be afraid to pick it up if you see it on the shelf. This book is really a missed opportunity to tell a really great story. With more research, an aim of telling the entire story and not just the view points of two men who worked in the front office, and tighter writing/editing, this book could have hit a grand slam. Instead, we'll just have to settle for a base hit.