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In 1998, a paper mill worker named Eric Christensen needed a place to talk about the Boston Red Sox with people who cared as much as he did. He set up a free message board, named it after a forgotten first-round draft pick and a serial killer, and unknowingly created the most influential fan community in American sports history.
The Sons of Sam Horn, known to its members as SoSH, became something that no one predicted and no one has replicated. A community so analytically rigorous that it broke trade rumors before ESPN. So respected that the team's own principal owner called it the best source for Red Sox discussion anywhere. So connected that Curt Schilling logged on during his trade negotiations and talked directly to fans. So powerful that one of its threads was formally accepted into the rare books collection of the Baseball Hall of Fame.
Threading SoSH is the untold story of how a small group of obsessive fans built a community that outlasted every social media platform designed to replace it. From the dial-up days of the late 1990s through the 2004 World Series championship that ended an 86-year curse, from the legendary "Win It For" thread that Peter Jennings reported on national television to the forum's quiet persistence into the 2020s, this is the story of what happens when strangers on the internet build something real.
It is also a story about belonging. About what the internet promised us and what it delivered instead. About the difference between a feed and a thread, between followers and members, between engagement and community. SoSH had the thing we have all been searching for online, and this book tells you how they built it, what it cost them, and why it still matters.
Featuring the untold stories of Curt Schilling's recruitment through the forum, John Henry's decision to announce the Schilling trade on SoSH before telling the press, Bill Simmons' years as a member, the community's charitable fundraising for the Jimmy Fund, and the offline gatherings where screen names became lifelong friends.
For Red Sox fans. For internet culture enthusiasts. For anyone who has ever been part of an online community that mattered and wondered why it couldn't last.
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