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A powerfully moving new novel from Mick Foley, filled with the same heart and imagination that made Tietam Brown so distinctive (?It makes you laugh so hard sometimes it makes you cry? ?Chicago Tribune).
Alfred A. Knopf
August 2005
Featuring: Scooter Riley
320 pages ISBN: 1400044146 Hardcover
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Contemporary
The time is 1969. Scooter Riley is a regular kid growing up in the Bronx, on Shakespeare Avenue, just north of Yankee Stadium. His father, Patrick Riley, is a New York City cop; his beat is Harlem, streets that are getting rougher by the day in the wake of the assassinations of Dr. King and Bobby Kennedy. Rileyβs Spartan code of ethics and unwavering sense of duty to his neighborhood and the Force will carry him through; neither homicide nor drugs are going to get in his way, even if his wife does want them to get the hell out of the Bronx and for him to take a βsafeβ job somewhere in the suburbs. Heβs happy with things as they are and wants to make time stand still, going to Yankee games in the neighborhood as he did growing up (as a boy heβd waited for hours to meet Joe D.βthe great Yankee Clipperβand collected two decades of Yankee autographs of Yogi, Larson, Lopat, Mantle, too; on yearbooks, scorecards, ticket stubs, Spaldeens). Riley wants his son, Scooterβnamed after Yankee shortstop Phil Rizzuto, MVP, 1950βto have a childhood just like his own. Scooter doesnβt get the same thrill his father gets from going to Yankee Stadium and watching the players βpunch it through the hole,β or βspray it all around.β He loves his father but yearns for his own styleβin baseball and in life. His grandfather, a fireman for thirty years and horribly scarred, harbors a dark secret that has caused a deep rift between him and Scooterβs dad. Scooterβs grandfather sees the game of baseball as the game of life itselfβto him all of lifeβs great lessons are explained in baseball lore, and he teaches Scooter to play the game in a way thatβs different from how his father wants him to play. He teaches Scooter as well that life can be defined in a few extraordinary momentsβmoments of courage, of cowardiceβwhen the ability to act, or not, defines who you are, and who you will become. Into this world, a world that becomes increasingly less kind to Scooter, the defining moments his grandfather has warned him about come at a rapid pace, and as the years pass and Scooter grows up, it is through baseball, and its timeless rhythms, that the defining moments in Scooterβs life are played outβand that the boy he is now, and the young man he will become, are shaped.
 Media BuzzConan O'Brien - September 14, 2005
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