Sons of Chester by Craig Ohlau and Kevin L. Gingrich is the story of a group of boys in the small town of Chester, Illinois during the 1990's and their love of baseball. Their dream to play in the national championships gives the story its hopeful and inspiring momentum.
The use of point-of-view is an effective tool drawing the reader not merely into the story, but onto the seat of a bicycle. Now, you are there experiencing the thrill of riding your bike down to the ballfield. The town's history and background narrative are rich with memories, factual information, and a sometimes bittersweet nostalgia for a bygone era. The love of baseball, of family, friends, and one's own home town is clearly shown in the telling of this story.
While some may be put off by the occasional, "boys only" rhetoric, make no mistake, Sons of Chester is about the heart of a boy and about honoring a special and important time. Juxtaposed alongside the remembrance of his larger-than-life father, Danny Ohlau, Craig Ohlau digs deep and shares what it was like to be a boy whose father worked at a maximum-security prison.
By far, the most gratifying aspect to this story is its ability to draw the reader into their own past, their own childhood memories of hours spent at the local ballfield, the smell of the grass, the cross-bantering of the spectators in the bleachers, the sound of the ball smacking into someone's mitt and the crack of the bat hitting a homer. It is not about chewing gum. It is about life and the mythos of an American town.