“A charming celebration of the role of cheating in our national game.”—David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times
“A pleasure. . . . Dickson writes extremely well and appreciates the nuances of baseball controversy. . . . This fine and original book should be in any literate fan’s library.”—Luke Salisbury, Boston Globe
“If you absorb even a fraction of the information in his [Dickson’s] tales of baseball’s silent strategy and how teams have used it to win games through the decades, your next trip to the ballpark will be considerably richer.”—Business Week
“Dickson’s impressively researched, well-written page-turner isn’t just for baseball fans. The anecdotes he recounts are fascinating, and the trivia is obscure enough that even a baseball fanatic will be enlightened.”—Washingtonian
“Anyone who has ever played or coached youth baseball or paid close attention to the third-base coach at a big-league game will appreciate the author’s guided tour through the history of diamond sign language. Dickson is a fine storyteller, and his latest book is a welcome addition to the rich canon of baseball literature.”—Kevin Canfield, Booklist
“A swell diversion, full of little stories such as Bill Veeck’s using telescopes to steal signs (and perhaps the pennant). We don’t think you get enough of that nowadays. Dickson traces the secret art from its humble beginnings during the Civil War (where they were an extension of battlefield signals) on up to last year's playoffs, when St. Louis snuffed out the Johnson/Schilling tandem, perhaps because of tipped pitches. While it doesn’t decode the cryptics on the field today, The Hidden Language of Baseball offers up a little dessert buffet of anecdotes that should keep the fathers of America feeling tender and warm in their easy chairs.”—Mudville Magazine: The Voice of Baseball
“Hard-core fans will relish this lively and informative inside look at signs and sign stealing. It gives a history and discusses the myths of the signs.”—Sporting News
“In this quick but sweeping examination, baseball historian Dickson explores the intricacies of baseball’s ‘hidden language,’ the rapid-fire signs that are delivered in a manner that can escape even well-tutored fans. . . . Belongs in all baseball collections.”—R.C. Cottrell, Library Journal
“An old-fashioned whiz-bang. . . . Dickson’s most rewarding book yet.”—James H. Bready, Baltimore Sun
“Dickson’s book contains enough inside information to dazzle even Tim McCarver and Al Leiter.”—Legal Times