John Grisham has hit this one out of the park. It isn't masquerading as rocket science; it is simply a tender tale of baseball, told with all the glory, and even the horror, that sometimes may accompany the game.
It is hard to know, at first, if this book is for adults or young adults, especially because of the cover which appears a bit juvenile, but perhaps it is for both, even though the subject matter may get dicey, with the inclusion of a dying parent who has also been physically abusive and sadistic, throughout much of his life. However, I thought Grisham handled those difficult concepts precisely, so they were not overwhelming, but were rather easy to deal with, leaving the reader with a lesson in humility, as the story dealt with feelings of remorse and hoped for redemption.
Baseball lovers, everywhere, will have to love and identify with this brief, less than 200 page book, covering some real and some made up out of whole cloth, baseball lore. Although, I thought the book started out a little too simplistically, almost like a fairy tale, with all the parts falling into place perfectly as if a puppet handler was moving the characters around, the story, in the end, fell into place perfectly. It is packed with tender emotions: excitement, compassion, disappointment, joy, tragedy, and finally, comprehension and forgiveness. It takes the reader through all of these feelings with a gentle grace.
It is 1973: it is the Cardinals vs the Cubs. Fate converges to bring Joe Castle to a magic day on the baseball field. He is brought up to the major leagues to play in the pennant race for the Cubs; he is a rookie with the chance of a lifetime, an up and coming star because two of the Cub's players have been injured. He breaks records left and right and becomes America’s hero.
Paul Tracey, son of a mediocre Mets player, Warren Tracey, adores baseball and worships Joe, angering his jealous father. When a horrific, not so accidental injury during the pennant race takes Joe permanently out of his baseball career, the world mourns his loss and is in an uproar and aims its fury at Warren, the pitcher who injured him.
For the next 30 years, Warren’s son Paul thinks about the accident, and he believes it was caused deliberately by his dad. He is driven by a need to try and make amends. His dad has never shown remorse and merely considers the injury a risk of the game. When Paul hears that the dad he has been estranged from, for years, is dying, he reaches out to him to help him make peace with Joe Castle, before his death. He is not a much loved parent; he abandoned his family, has been distant, neglectful, and abusive, not inspiring any attachment or even sadness for his suffering, from those he left behind. How he decides to conclude his life is an important theme of the book. How Paul arranges for his father and Joe to meet and make peace, is the lesson of the book.
Baseball lovers everywhere will have to love Joe and identify with his hero quality, his quiet humility, and his amazing success, especially today because we are in the era of the great football player Tebow and the basketball whiz kid, Jeremy Lin. The fantasy Grisham creates, coupled with some real historic events, make this little charmer a page turner.