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Bezig met laden... Follow the Sharks (1985)door William G. Tapply
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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. Baseball. Kidnapping a child. Murder. Eddie Donagan had been a promising major league pitcher until suddenly, he could no longer throw the ball. His life fell apart. Several years previously, attorney Brady Coyne received a call from a wealthy client. He had spotted Donagan, then playing baseball in college, and marked him as someone with a great future in the game. He wanted to sign him but realized that Donagan needed an agent who would watch out for his interests. He decided that Coyne was the right person for the job. Though it wasn’t his specialty, Coyne took the job. Sure enough, Donagan was signed by the Boston Red Sox, began a successful career, and married his client’s daughter. A few years later, the career and marriage ended and Coyne lost contact with Donagan. That was until he got a panicky phone call from Donagan’s ex-wife and her father telling him that Donagan’s ten-year-old son E.J. hadn’t come home after finishing his morning paper route. When Donagan got to E.J.’s house, he discovered that the police weren’t concerned with his disappearance. They said that at that age, a lot of boys take off for a short time for various reasons and then return one their own. In real life, the case would be handled properly by the police, especially since it involves a prominent, wealthy citizen and a ten-year-old boy, but that would not make for an interesting novel, so against his better judgment, Coyne was soon mixed up in a very confusing and dangerous case. The story continued with a $150,000 ransom demand with very strict, convoluted demands for delivering the money. After the ransom was paid, however, E.J. still did not return home. And then Eddie disappeared and Coyne began to receive some very cryptic clues from the kidnapper. Questions arose as to whether the kidnapping was connected to Eddie, either directly or because of something that might have happened when he was still playing professional baseball. William G. Tapply’s descriptive writing put the reader into the story. There is an amazing description of what it feels like to be drowning that left me gasping for breath.. He also presented a lot of interesting information and background on baseball. He stated “Baseball is a game of absolutely flat planes, perfect right angles, precise distances, measured velocities, and beautiful parabolas. Euclid would have loved baseball....Baseball demonstrates repeatedly all the physical laws of motion.” I had never looked at it that way. I will always be seeing that in the future. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Brady Coyne (3)
Fiction.
HTML: The Boston attorney searches Red Sox Nation for a ballplayer's kidnapped son in this "grittily persuasive" mystery novel (Kirkus Reviews). For two years, Eddie Donagan was on track to become the greatest Red Sox pitcher of all time. Then one day, without warning, he went from unhittable to ineffectiveâ??forcing him to drop out of the Majors before he even hit his prime. Attorney Brady Coyne met Donagan before he turned pro, and stays friends with him even as the faded star drifts into depression, disappearing from his wife and child for days at a time. Finally, the Donagans are thrown into crisisâ??but it isn't Eddie's disappearance that causes it. It's his son's.
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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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Brady Coyne is an excellent character that has survived for a long time in the world of fiction. He seems to be a gentleman with a solid conscience and a quick wit. The plot of Follow the Sharks is interesting, with an intriguing story and some well made characters in addition to Brady. It moves at an optimum pace, and the descriptions of places, people and the action are very enjoyable.
This one is a fine book to spend a lazy weekend with, and I did just that. ( )