Listen, guys. Not all nerds hate sports. Prove it? You want me to prove it? Fine! Read How Fantasy Sports Explains the World: What Pujols and Peyton Can Teach Us About Wookiees and Wall Street by AJ Mass. Youâll be a believer. And if you already love fantasy sports (I loooove me some fantasy baseball, I won’t lie), youâll really appreciate this.
Recently, I had a little email chat with Mass and thought it would make for a better book review than I could write because, letâs face it, the title is pretty self-explanatory. I want to preface this by saying: How Fantasy Sports Explains the World is definitely not just for sports fans. This is a book any nerd can get into. Maybe not knitting nerds. I lied.
So, hereâs the — well, letâs loosely call it an interview — chat I had with Mass:
Tell me about your book (in your own wonderful words).
I decided to talk to experts from all walks of life: legal experts, biblical experts, economists, the astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson, romance expert Steve Ward (Tough Love) as well as pop-culture figures like Jane Espenson (Buffy), Alec Sulkin (Family Guy), and Survivor contestant Yau-Man Chan.
What I found there was that life lessons could be taken from playing fantasy sports and could be applied to other parts of our lives. You don’t even need to know anything about fantasy sports to relate to a majority of the stories in this book. If you’ve ever picked up the phone to vote for American Idol, been called for jury duty, attended Comic-Con, gone out on a blind date, or been in a meeting at work where you couldn’t wait for a certain co-worker to shut up⦠you can relate to this book.
Itâs meant to be a fun, entertaining book for anyone who has a passion about anything, full of anecdotes that take you from the boardroom to the courtroom, from charred Connecticut campgrounds to the world of psychic charlatans and to the edge of a galaxy, far, far, away.
What was it like to get the (pardon the pun) ball rolling on this project? There are so many interviews and interesting stories here, was it difficult to get it started?
Two days after my book was released, the West Memphis Three were released. It was incredible, given the message of that final chapter about never giving up hope…
Thatâs AMAZING! It sounds like you were incredibly persistent in getting this done. Is there any advice you can offer to other writers about getting their own book ideas off the ground?
As always you can find me on Twitter, email me at [email protected] or leave a comment here. OH! Oh! And stay tuned for a forthcoming podcast by yours truly and friends, called No Math Allowed! A Podcast About Books. Sorta. Itâll be coming in April, we hope, and should be a good old fashioned book nerd festival of fun….
Hi Eric,I’ve been playing fastany baseball for nearly 12 years now, but I’ve used your site for the past 3.You have great articles and very helpful insight. You’re site has been extremely helpful. Keep up the great work and I wish you luck in your league this year!!Dave
There are plenty of nerds who enjoy sports in general, and fantasy sports in particular. I grew up a fan of several sports, but (in true nerd fashion) was never good at any of them. So I resigned myself to watching the pros on TV. Fantasy sports are perfect for people like me; the statistics component plays right into our analytical nature, and the interactive component gives us an outlet to feel like we are actively participating in the sport. I’ve also found that my knowledge of the game has expanded as a result.