I read this in 2014 and gave it five stars and I give it five stars again after just finishing Neal Karlen's great book about baseball, love, second chances, redemption, life and all else.
This really is a fantastic book. Karlen is assigned to cover the St. Paul Saints minor league baseball team to write a story trashing part owner Bill Murray for Rolling Stone. The Saints are in the Northern League, a six-team minor league division with teams in Fargo, Winnipeg, Duluth, Sioux Falls, St. Paul and Thunder Bay. It's the end of the line, the last chance for baseball players wanting to make it to the big leagues.
It's also a symbol for people like Karlen, who went through a divorce and hates baseball since he and his ex-wife connected through the game. His story, which he has mixed emotions about doing, could bring him back to the world of big time journalism.
There's also Darryl Strawberry, the great baseball player with the perfect swing who crashed due to drugs. The Northern League was his last chance to prove he was worthy of returning to the majors.
So, there's baseball in here, but there's also redemptive chances. Mike Veeck, the former Chicago White Sox promoter who did orchestrated the disaster-filled Disco Demolition Night in 1979 and was banished, is trying to prove he is worthy as well. There are other characters, too. A nun who does massages and talks like Lawrence Welk, a legless outfielder, a woman pitcher, a blind announcer and a pig who brings balls onto the field.
Karlen discovers that fun, the return to what baseball was supposed to be about. Across the river in Minneapolis, the Twins symbolize the corporate business end of the sport while St. Paul just has fun.
Karlen spends two seasons with the team and debates about doing his story designed to slam Murray, since Rolling Stone editor Jann Wenner hates Murray. His decision whether to write the piece is part of his growth and return to life via baseball.
Sounds deep, but it is. Karlen takes the reader on a great journey with baseball and life. I grew up in northern Minnesota and have been to Fargo and Duluth and Thunder Bay often. It makes me want to return to watch a game up there.