-The House of Daniel is pitch perfect. Harry Turtledove crafts a richly detailed portrait of barnstorming baseball in the 1930s, stitches it around a supernatural orb, and smashes this quintessential American story over the fence for a home run. Read it!- --Scott Simkus, author of Outsider Baseball: The Weird World of Hardball on the Fringe (1876--1950) -In a loving callback to the early days of a quintessential American sport, Turtledove (We Install and Other Stories) takes readers on a scenic tour of the highways and byways of an alternate United States in 1934...ideal for baseball lovers.- --Publishers Weekly -Turtledove has proved he can divert his readers to astonishing places...I know I'd follow his imagination almost anywhere.- --San Jose Mercury News The House of Daniel is pitch perfect. Harry Turtledove crafts a richly detailed portrait of barnstorming baseball in the 1930s, stitches it around a supernatural orb, and smashes this quintessential American story over the fence for a home run. Read it! --Scott Simkus, author of Outsider Baseball: The Weird World of Hardball on the Fringe (1876--1950) In a loving callback to the early days of a quintessential American sport, Turtledove (We Install and Other Stories) takes readers on a scenic tour of the highways and byways of an alternate United States in 1934...ideal for baseball lovers. --Publishers Weekly Turtledove has proved he can divert his readers to astonishing places...I know I'd follow his imagination almost anywhere. --San Jose Mercury News The House of Daniel is pitch perfect. Harry Turtledove crafts a richly detailed portrait of barnstorming baseball in the 1930s, stitches it around a supernatural orb, and smashes this quintessential American story over the fence for a home run. Read it! --Scott Simkus, author of Outsider Baseball: The Weird World of Hardball on the Fringe (1876--1950) In a loving callback to the early days of a quintessential American sport, Turtledove (We Install and Other Stories) takes readers on a scenic tour of the highways and byways of an alternate United States in 1934...ideal for baseball lovers. --Publishers Weekly Turtledove has proved he can divert his readers to astonishing places...I know I'd follow his imagination almost anywhere. --San Jose Mercury News