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3 Entries
David Remski
February 17, 2019
I only discovered Bob through his obituary, and I'm sorry that it came too late for me to know him. As an expat living in Toronto and having spent most of my recent years watching, thinking about, and writing about baseball, I feel that we would have had a lot in common, especially since I just finished reading "Away Game", which I found immensely absorbing. If you can know a man by his words, having read his novel I know that he was a good and kind man, and his family, to whom I extend my deepest sympathies, must be so saddened by his death.
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February 14, 2019
Being edited can be torture. But when Bob summoned you to his desk with a calm, emotion-free phone call, you knew you'd be fine. He was quick, and proud of it. He sat, you stood, and the problems were solved methodically but thoughtfully as the cursor blinked. Compressed wisdom was his gift -- time is a limited resource in daily journalism, and he believed the culture of prolonged over-editing and enforced rewriting was as unnecessary as it was destructive. No wonder he was admired by feature writers -- he always felt like an advocate, and took our work (and the emotional demands it made) personally. He could always offer a compelling argument for suggested changes, but he was equally ready to give the writer the last word (though his doubts would stay with you and prompt your own second thoughts). Efficient editing allowed us more time to chat, often about sports, usually baseball, mostly the Jays and what they were doing wrong. People who don't understand think men have problems with intimacy, but every conversation with Bob, even if it started with his skeptical comment about sentence length and moved on to a frustrated criticism of Toronto's bullpen use, was dependably heartfelt, sincere, revealing and deeply human. The edit done, you walked away from him feeling good, and not just about your work.
February 10, 2019
I was a classmate of Bob's for many years at Friends' Central School in Philadelphia. He was a wonderful person then, and clearly he lived a full life afterward, even with all its challenges. I was filled with sorrow upon hearing of his death, and wish to pass along my deepest condolences to all his family.
Sarah George (Figueira)
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