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Slider (Hardcover)

by Patrick Robinson (Author) "At 5 A.M. the sun had not yet risen over the long winding Bayou Lafourche ..." (more)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Known for writing submarine thrillers like The Shark Mutiny, Robinson demonstrates his knowledge and love of baseball in this tale of a Louisiana college student who opts to play summer ball in Maine for a league that has produced a number of major league players. Jack Faber's father, Ben, an impoverished sugar cane farmer, drives him up the coast, and on the way they pick up another outstanding prospect, Tony Garcia, accompanied by his mother, Natalie. Natalie is a struggling music teacher and adamantly opposed to Tony playing baseball. In spite of their differences, Natalie and Ben are attracted to each other. Jack has a terrific season with the Seapuit Seawolves, is named most valuable player and is offered a major league contract, which he turns down. When Jack returns to college, a tough new coach breaks his spirit in a matter of days with unwarranted criticism, and Jack ends up quitting baseball. But his coaches in Maine still believe in him and invite him back to the Cape Marlin Baseball Summer League, where they rebuild his confidence with infinite care. The story might have ended here, but Robinson heads off on a tangent in the final pages when a billionaire major league owner forces his underproducing team to play an exhibition game against the Seawolves, the catch being that if his team loses he will shut down the franchise. The ending defies credibility as does a deus ex machina discovery of natural gas on Ben Faber's property that makes him a multimillionaire and allows him and Natalie to get together. Plenty of baseball play-by-play provides fodder for fans, but scattered action distracts from the fun, and too many characters crowd the playing field.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


From Booklist

Robinson's baseball novel is constructed around one of the most vexing questions in sports: Why would a successful pitcher suddenly find himself bereft of the physical tools that made him a star? The book's hero, Jack Faber, is the reigning king of a prestigious collegiate league, but bad breaks and self-doubt have robbed him of his skills. Hamstrung from the start by a predictable plot and occasionally stilted dialogue, the novel still manages to offer up several characters worth worrying over. There is the introspective hurler who seems destined for pro ball, the conflicted mother who wants her son to quit the game and concentrate on his studies, and the frustrated ex-ballplayer who seems bent on derailing the career of every phenom. Robinson is a baseball traditionalist; in his world, there is still a team playing at Ebbets Field. With solid accounts of game action and salty ballpark language, this makes a passable addition to the literature of the game. Think Michael Shaara's For Love of the Game with less style but more guts. Kevin Canfield
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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At 5 A.M. the sun had not yet risen over the long winding Bayou Lafourche. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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2 star:
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1 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.5 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars the best book ever, April 11 2003
By A Customer
i totally agree with jeff reardon when he says "this is the best book about baseball...ever!"

i have never read anything better than this book and i 100% reccommend it

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3.0 out of 5 stars A Pleasant Story -- Flawed but Fun, Mar 26 2003
By John Standiford (Cypress, California) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I'm somewhat taken aback by the negativity of some of the reviews that other readers have posted regarding this book. Yes, there are inconsistencies but this isn't Bill James and the Baseball Abstract. At its heart it's kind of a romantic novel that uses baseball as its backdrop in writing about setting goals and reaching them.

Focusing on the baseball content of this book and then criticizing it for it's lack of accuracy, would be about as stupid as watching Get Smart to do research on the CIA.

Instead, I would suggest that readers focus on some of the relationships between the characters in this book. The interplay between star pitcher Jack Farber with his father and catcher make for great reading. The same is true for the descriptions of the Northeast and some of the some small cities the Cape League plays their games.

Where the book does tend to fall apart is at the end. The writer attempts to make a negative statement about the attitudes of professional athletes by concocting an unrealistic ending that is far too predictable.

Still, I enjoyed reading the book and would recommend it to most people. In fact, I would even it recommend it to most baseball fans with the exception of those geeks that spend way too much time with box scores rather than with real life.

Finally, another recommendation for a fun baseball book would be Summerland by Michael Chabon.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Low and Outside, Jan 15 2003
By Bret Hern (Houston, TX United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
My "bad book" antennae were alerted on page 1 of this tome when I noticed a rather pathetic typo (Mississippi is misspelled), and nothing on the succeeding 400 pages allowed them to relax, even though I went into "skim for big events" mode about halfway in.

This is a bad novel, with all the authenticity of hair in a can, and as flat as the troublesome slider thrown by the nominal hero of the story. The baseball action is described in aimless, excessive, and error-prone detail, almost every plot line is preposterous and full of holes, and the dialogue reads like something out of a Chip Hilton story. Examples beyond what has been offered in other reviews:

- Hard luck mother of catcher despairs of his ever getting started with a law career if he wastes a couple of precious years trying to play baseball. Yep, those law firms hate to hire former athletes...

- A pitcher from a college baseball powerhouse goes from summer league MVP to being essentially cut from his team, AND NOBODY KNOWS ABOUT IT. Did Einstein predict the presence of media black holes, too?

- A pitcher (from Stanford, no less) continues to pitch through pain; apparently the lure of the Ted Kennedy Trophy (I'm not making this up) is far greater than the $2 MM+ signing bonus he'll get for being a first round draft pick.

Ugh. Even the "local color" of the summer league scene, which was the reason I picked up the book in the first place, is trotted out with a sort of Truman Show kind of gloss, and goes nowhere. No runs, no hits, and too many errors.

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Most recent customer reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Weak storyline but plenty of suspense
When I read the author bio, I asked myself what a submarine expert would be doing writing a baseball novel. The Seawolves were obviously a fanatsy. Read more
Published on Dec 18 2002

4.0 out of 5 stars As Good as a Ground Rule Double
Patrick Robinson's "Slider" is like a cool glass of lemonade on a warm summer's night. It satisfies. If you are looking for a baseball book, look someplace else. Read more
Published on Oct 17 2002 by James E. Carroll

1.0 out of 5 stars Don't Bother If You Like Baseball
For a baseball fan, this book is awful, almost painful. It's pretty clear the author doesn't really understand baseball. The book is full of obvious errors. Read more
Published on Sep 9 2002 by MK White

1.0 out of 5 stars Not For Baseball Fans
Patrick Robinson is obviously a Brit writing about the American Pastime. There are many basic flaws in his description of the game's play-by-play. Read more
Published on Aug 27 2002 by wendellx3

3.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read for 300 pages, but then turned absurd
This was a well-written baseball book until the author decided to throw in an absolutely ridiculous fantasy ending that dragged on for 100 pages. Read more
Published on Aug 12 2002

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