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Bezig met laden... Castro's Curveball (editie 1999)door Tim Wendel (Auteur)
Informatie over het werkCastro's Curveball door Tim Wendel
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. Narrated by LJ Ganser. In 1947 Cuba, Billy Bryan is a pitcher playing winter baseball when he meets Fidel Castro during a political protest at one of his games. He asks Fidel to throw some pitches and he is surprisingly good. Papa Joe, a baseball scout for the Washington Senators presses Billy to get Fidel to sign with the Senators. But Fidel seems more involved and committed to revolutionary activities. Billy also falls in love with Lena, a photographer and revolutionist. Descriptive of the times and atmosphere and of the baseball player life. Novel apparently inspired by a rumor that Fidel had signed with the Senators. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Recently widowed and now retired, Billy Bryan is "coming to the end of many things." Then a long-forgotten scrapbook stirs memories of a distant past--and beckons him and his grown daughter on a reluctant journey to relive his role in history. In 1947 Billy Bryan is playing winter ball in Cuba, his future as uncertain as the island country. Then one fateful night Bryan witnesses a young student radical named Fidel unleash an amazing curveball. So begins Billy's tug-of-war with destiny. . . . Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Playing winter baseball in Cuba is the only path left to the major leagues for Billy Bryan in 1947, and the deep-thinking catcher knows that he doesn't have many chances left to stand out to the people who decide who makes it and who doesn't. Cuba is at a similar crossroads as young revolutionaries led by Fidel Castro are working to usurp the country's government and instill a new way of life for its people.
Billy and Fidel's lives intersect on the baseball diamond one night as Castro leads a group of radicals onto the playing field during a game, and Billy offers young Fidel a chance to throw a few pitches. That interaction sets Billy off in an unexpected direction, and he finds himself in the middle of a revolution and falling in love with Malena Fonseca, the photographer tasked with documenting it.
Malena's photographs are why, more than 40 years after leaving Cuba, Billy finds himself on a plane headed back there with his adult daughter and a host of memories of baseball, Castro, Cuba, and the woman Billy left behind.
CASTRO'S CURVEBALL by Tim Wendel combines sports, history, and personal relationships in a wonderful amalgam with a terrific plot and characters that make you care deeply about them. The story alternates between modern day(ish) and Billy's final days in Cuba in the 40s.
Just to be clear--I love Billy Bryan, and not just because "aging catcher" is my favorite baseball character in both literature and film. Billy has more depth than the typical sports protagonist, and his story is set in a fascinating time. I haven't studied nor read much about Cuba in the late 40s, but after reading CASTRO'S CURVEBALL, I'm going to have to remedy that.
But since I do love baseball so much (baseball was the first game I learned to play in depth), let's talk about the baseball scenes for a minute. Those sections are incredibly well written, and I could almost feel the grit from the infield and hear the crack of a bat every time the book's action took me to the ballpark. But, when reading a book that revolves around a sport, I'm often sad when the plot takes me anywhere other than the field, but that wasn't the case with CASTRO'S CURVEBALL. I was thrilled to find that the action outside of the diamond was just as engrossing as the games in which Billy played.
CASTRO'S CURVEBALL is a great book of historical fiction, it's a fantastic sports book, and the relationships between the covers are just as intriguing as the play between the foul lines. I regret that my dad isn't alive so that I can share the book with him and get his take on it--I'd love to talk about this novel with someone else who is a fan of baseball, history, and politics. Also, I hear that there's a sequel of the book coming out soon, and I'm excited to read that one, too. Kudos to Tim Wendel to characters and a story that will stay with me for a while.
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