Ray Kinsella's "The Iowa Baseball Confederacy".
The book is nice.
But it would have been much more fun to read pre-Trump, pre-Qanon, pre-9/11 even.
A man obsessed with a truth only he knows, who harasses mainstream organizations for supposedly hiding the truth, doesn't play as well now as a story.
Also, I can't recall if this, or Philip Roth's "The Great American Novel " - also about a baseball league whose existence is now covered up - it was a Watergate era novel, was written first, or if one might have gotten ideas from the other.
Okay, I looked it up: Roth's book was published in 1973, and I think I read it the first time around then, at age 13 or 14 or so, within a year or two of its being published. Kinsella's was published in 1986, so that part of the bok, that there was once a baseball league that no one wants to admit ever existed, and all records of which have been done away with, is derivative of Roth's book. But Roth's is a third major league, and the intrigue is both mythological and political, whereas Kinsella's is a local minor league and the book is so far mythological without having brought politics into it, though Field of Dreams did, so this one might as well. Not very far into it yet.