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I'm a native of Roslyn, N.Y., now living in Rosslyn, Va., better known as Arlington. A graduate of Cornell University, I was in the same Cornell Daily Sun graduating class as New York Times (NYT) national editor Marc Lacey, now-ex NYT (and bounced from CNN) two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Eric Lichtblau, and libertarian Reason Magazine senior editor Jacob Sullum. I did daily journalism for close to 5 years in Washington, D.C., right out of college. My greatest influence was Gregory Gordon, head of United Press International's D.C. investigative unit when I was a college summer intern in it. Gordon is now an investigative reporter for McClatchy Newspapers in D.C. (Coincidentally, I wrote a string of 19th-century-themed baseball freelance articles for the then-McClatchy-Tribune wire service mostly around a decade ago.) My four prior books were all definitive on the relatively unpopular era (by today's warped standards) of baseball in the 19th century. But with the benefit of living near the Library of Congress, by far the largest U.S. source of newspapers on microfilm, as well as books and serials, I was able to come close to accounting for all available sources. Ty Cobb Unleashed is the first major Cobb biographical work to be from an author in the D.C. area. If it succeeds in one of its missions, in accounting for the vast majority of remaining key sources on Cobb, it may be the last, whether or not researched mainly from D.C. In Ty Cobb Unleashed, I always try to credit other authors for particular detail (whether in a positive or negative light). The transparent crediting also serves a larger purpose that some readers may find refreshing: its side-by-side comparison of two 2015 Cobb books, from well-known publishers Simon & Schuster and Sports Publishing, for their technical quality. Although baseball history books are not as popular as other types of history ones, most baseball subjects lend themselves to relatively easy analysis for a larger purpose. After all, the sport's history is not rocket science, especially when not swimming in computer-driven statistical analysis. I stumbled across Cobb in the summer of 2016, when Rolling Stone magazine lumped Cobb with Cap Anson (my main 19th-century baseball subject of expertise) as having been rumored to be members of the Ku Klux Klan. When Rolling Stone expunged Cobb from a later version of the article and kept Anson in it without responding to me (despite my providing argumentation showing how flimsy the claim was), I was inspired to read up more on Cobb.