Peter C. Bjarkman

Peter C. Bjarkman
Born (1941-05-19)May 19, 1941
Hartford, Connecticut, U.S.
Nationality American
Education Ph.D. Linguistics
Alma mater University of Florida
Occupation author, sports historian
Website www.bjarkman.com

Peter C. Bjarkman (born May 19, 1941) is a baseball historian, freelance author, and commentator on the baseball played in Cuba after the 1959 Communist revolution.[1] He currently provides regular internet commentary on Cuban League baseball as Senior Writer for the US-based internet website BaseballdeCuba.com and has appeared frequently on radio and television sports talk shows as an observer and analyst of the Cuban national sport.[2] He has also published more than three dozen books ranging in scope from Major League Baseball history and college and professional basketball history to sports biographies for young adult readers.

Biography

Bjarkman was born and raised in Hartford, Connecticut, and graduated from the East Hartford Public School system in 1959.[3] He attend the University of Hartford as an undergraduate where he captained the varsity cross country team, played freshman basketball and varsity baseball, and graduated in 1963 with a degree in English Education. He later earned two masters degrees from the University of Hartford (Education, 1970), and Hartford’s Trinity College (English, 1972), plus a Ph.D. (1976) in linguistics from the University of Florida in Gainesville.[4]

In the 1960s and early 1970s Bjarkman served as secondary school English teacher and track and field coach in Connecticut (Wethersfield High School), as well as teaching English at American bi-national schools in Bucaramanga, Colombia (1968-1969) and Guayaquil, Ecuador (1971-1972).[5] After completing his doctorate (with a specialization in Spanish linguistics) he pursued a university teaching career that stretched from 1976 to 1987 and included faculty positions at George Mason University (Fairfax, Virginia), Butler University (Indianapolis), Ball State University (Muncie, Indiana), the University of Colorado (Boulder) and Purdue University (West Lafayette, Indiana).

Since the early 1980s Bjarkman has resided in Lafayette, Indiana. His extensive travels during the past three decades have involved numerous visits and extended stays in Eastern Europe (especially Croatia) and Cuba (more than three dozen visits since 1997), plus travels in Asia (Japan), Latin American (especially the Caribbean), and much of Western and Eastern Europe.

Writing career

Beginning a freelance writing career in the late 1980s, Bjarkman authored more than twenty books on baseball and basketball history, including Major League Baseball team histories, young adult sports biographies, baseball and basketball coffee table picture books, and several ground-breaking academic histories of baseball played in Latin America and Cuba.[6] Since June 2007 he has provided on-line essays and analysis of Cuban League games, plus regular on-line and print coverage of the Cuban national team during its numerous international baseball tournament appearances.[7]

Bjarkman’s acceptance as an acknowledged authority on post-1962 Cuban baseball has led to numerous electronic and print media appearances and interviews. Notable among these have been several featured interviews on ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” with Bob Ley, an appearance in the ESPN Films award-winning “30 for 30” documentary “Brothers in Exile”, and a central on-camera role in the Travel Channel airing of Anthony Bourdain’s “No Reservations Cuba” (first shown in July 2011).[8] Bjarkman’s extensive connections with Cuban baseball and his unique access on the Communist island nation have been highlighted in a November 2010 front-page feature story by the Wall Street Journal.[9]

Works

Bjarkman’s works include:

Books
Essays and Chapters

Awards and Recognition

Notes

  1. “Inside Baseball: This Yanqui is Welcome Inside Cuba’s Locker Room” (by Christopher Rhoads) in: Wall Street Journal (November 9, 2010), 1, A16. (http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052748704141104575588360930640460?mod=ITP_TEST&mg=reno64-wsj&url=http%3A%2F%2Fonline.wsj.com%2Farticle%2FSB10001424052748704141104575588360930640460.html%3Fmod%3DITP_TEST)
  2. BaseballdeCuba.com, El Sitio Web del Deporte Nacional de Cuba (“Website of Cuba’s National Sport”) (http://www.baseballdecuba.com/newsite/index.html)
  3. “Peter C. Bjarkman, Author and Traveler” (Capsule Author Biography Page)
  4. ; also author entry, Baseball Reference.com
  5. “Peter Bjarkman—aka Dr. Baseball” (by Robert Cannon) in Sports Collectors Digest 20:16 (April 16, 1993), 174-177.
  6. “¡Viva el Béisbol! From Professor of Linguistics to Cuban Baseball Expert” (Bjarkman Profile in “9 to 5, Act II: Alumni Tell Us How Their Career Paths Have Diverged”) in: Observer: The Magazine of the University of Hartford, Spring 2010, 22.
  7. “Bjarkman’s Latino and Cuban Baseball History Page” (Bjarkman’s MLB-hosted baseball blog (http://bjarkmanlatinobaseball.mlblogs.com/).
  8. “No Reservations on Cuba baseball for author” (by Tim Brouk) in: The Lafayette (Indiana) Journal & Courier (June 13, 2011), A8
  9. “Inside Baseball: This Yanqui is Welcome Inside Cuba’s Locker Room” (by Christopher Rhoads) in: Wall Street Journal (November 9, 2010), 1, A16.
  10. (http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/14/sports/baseball/conrado-marrero-a-bridge-to-cubas-baseball-past.html?_r=2&ref=sports&)
  11. “Fidel Castro and Baseball” in The SABR Baseball Biography Project, On-Line (http://sabr.org/bioproj/topic/fidel-castro-and-baseball)
  12. “Sadaharu Oh” in The SABR Baseball Biography Project, On-Line (http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/0a6a2e10)
  13. “Connie Marrero” in The SABR Baseball Biography Project, On-Line (http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/7920d04b)
  14. CASEY Award

“This Yanqui is Welcome in Cuba’s Locker Room” by Christopher Rhoads, Wall Street Journal, on-line Bjarkman portrait

“A Champion of Cuban Baseball” Video report by Christopher Rhoads, Wall Street Journal on-line video interview

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