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novel ISBN 978-0-930773-823 |
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What the Critics are Saying |
From Publishers Weekly
The 1897 Cleveland Spiders were a talented baseball team, and Salisbury's
vividly rendered first novel captures the players, the memories surrounding them
and the American public's burgeoning obsession with baseball at the turn of the
century. Salisbury focuses on the fictional relationship between narrator Henry
Harrison--the team's lawyer and a self-described "Krank," as fans were called in
those days--and the charismatic King Saturday, the club's raucous, unpredictable
and doomed American Indian superstar. Modeled after Lou Sockalexis--considered
the first Native American major-leaguer and a real star for the Spiders in 1897
(you can look it up)--Saturday is rendered as a magisterial but unknowable
figure of tremendous physical skills and enigmatic motivations. The character of
19th-century baseball--the aggressive tactics, hard-drinking players and
pervasive gambling--is wonderfully depicted, as are the political tensions and
social strictures of the period. Harrison's earnest, crisp narrative voice is
appealing. There are some flaws: certain sections--Harrison following Saturday
to the steaming jungles of Cuba, for example--seem almost a parody of the
adventure novel. It's also unfortunate that we get to know the extraordinary
King Saturday only through his schemes and his awesome deeds, and never through
the articulation of his inner life.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
A Penobscot Indian with a terrific arm and flexible morality takes Cleveland's
baseball team briefly to the top of the league in the 1890's. The salaries were
a tiny fraction of today's, and Cleveland was in the National League, but even
then there were gifted players who gambled and lawyers who would rather sit in
the grandstands than in a courtroom. Henry Harrison is among the latter, a well-
born but impoverished Ivy League graduate dazzled by the throwing arm, hitting
skills, and romantic talents of Louis King Phillip Saturday, a half-ugly
half-Indian from Maine. Saturday is signed by the Cleveland Spiders, who also
hire Harrison as their lawyer. Harrison's primary duty is to keep an eye on his
wild friend--an assignment that introduces him to the seamier side of the
Cuyahoga River. It does not take Harrison very long to discover that Saturday
sees nothing wrong with betting on baseball, including his own games, and Henry
finds himself willingly holding the bag and becoming Saturday's business
partner. Saturday's such a good player and such a good gambler that the bag
begins to fill up fast, and Harrison's ambition to own his very own professional
team begins to seem possible. Another similarity to today's sport: worshipful
women. In addition to managing the money, Harrison must keep Saturday's admirers
in order. Alas, Harrison himself fancies at least one of the ladies. When the
glorious season with the Spiders spectacularly ends, Saturday, whose gambling
has become an open secret, must take it on the lam to Cuba, Mexico, and
Colorado. Standard Oil, of all things, figures into the action at every turn.
Salisbury (the nonfictional The Answer is Baseball, 1989) offers brisk fun for
the Bart Giamattis of this world. -- Copyright ©1992, Kirkus Associates, LP.
All rights reserved.