Used price: $1.40
Collectible price: $2.64
Buy one from zShops for: $5.00
Used price: $0.10
Collectible price: $2.12
Used price: $1.98
Collectible price: $5.95
Buy one from zShops for: $14.00
Used price: $20.36
Buy one from zShops for: $19.90
This is very good collection of mystery writers and (for reasons I fail to grasp) Mike Lupica. I have read the works of over half the authors and a big fan of some of them.
The book was a pleasant diversion from the normal selection of mysteries and thrillers I read...especially as the major league season winds down.
Most of the stories were quick reads with a couple of surprise endings. Short stories are a different way to enjoy a writer when you are used to the whole novel. It was amazing to see how well some of these novelists could develop characters and plot in such a short format.
I found the stories by Michael Connelly, Laura Lippman, Elmore Leonard, Henry Slesar, Troy Soos and Robert Parker the best. Other than the Lupica the only other one that I found lacking was the one by K.C. Constantine.
List price: $24.95 (that's 76% off!)
Used price: $4.99
A whole array of colorful characters project Lupica's view of the game and those around it. Mo Jiggy, the gangsta rapper from "Bump and Run" who became a big time agent in "Full Court Press", is back for a cameo. The main voice of irreverence, however belongs to Pooty Shaw, the hard hitting catcher whose baseball millions have attracted an endless string of beautiful girlfriends with attitude. We also get to meet Booker Impala Washington, the limo driver who's really the brains behind the new Red Sox owner. The main story revolves around Charlie and his inscrutable trainer Chang, which will remind you a lot of Kevin Costner and Cheech Marin in "Tin Cup". As it builds to a close, you will realize that there's not enough time for a real sappy storybook ending. Lupica finds the perfect touch to wrap it up.
There are a few bumps along the way. Lupica seems to insert a brand name on every other page giving you the feeling that you're watching those rotating ads in the ballpark, spinning at warp speed. There's a little too much baseball trivia, like three solid pages on the history of the left field wall at Fenway. The references to Elaine's and T.J. Tucker's make it read like a Dan Jenkins knock off at times, and the word games around the Grace MacKenzie character - Amazing Grace, goodnight Gracie, Grace under pressure - are a little too cutsie.
All in though, it was a five star read.
Used price: $0.40
Collectible price: $0.95
Buy one from zShops for: $2.24
Used price: $15.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $3.18
Buy one from zShops for: $1.68
Instead, this is really the story of Lupica and his sons (with occasional appearances by his dad and wife). It tells how the events of 1998 impacted them, where they were at important times, etc.
If you're looking for history or for an account following the players, look elsewhere. If you'd like to read a fascinating, if slight, view of the impact of the Great Homer Race on a family of baseball fans, you'll love this book.
List price: $24.95 (that's 80% off!)
Bump and Run is a hilariously funny novel about "Jammer" Molloy taking over 50% ownership of his father's porfessional New York football team. Having been the "go-to-guy" for a large, successful resort in Las Vegas, the NFL shouldn't be a problem, or at least, that's what one would think.
Lupica masterfully intertwines a multitude of interesting characters, each one with a seemingly more ridiculous name. The writing is excellent, as always, and the storyline has a nice steady flow to it. He meshes his characters with recognizable names from the NFL, which adds a really nice touch. His language is so descriptive, and each scene is so detailed, that you sometimes forget that this is just a novel.
Above all, Bump and Run is quite funny. Lupica uses his intellectual wit and dry sense of humor in making one fantastic book. This novel is not just for sports' fans. It's for anyone that really likes to read good books. This book is a winner.
All that aside, why should you read this book? Because it is written by an excellent sportswriter and it is thoroughly entertaining, engaging and FUN.
List price: $12.99 (that's 20% off!)
Used price: $9.03
Buy one from zShops for: $9.03
That sort of preposterous dialog -- and the hackneyed romance between Dee and her coach -- made it difficult to fully to enjoy Lupica's well-intentioned little fantasy.
The first half of the book continues at a great pace with a slew of colorful characters. The last half was a let down. I enjoyed it, however, it wasn't as crisp as Bump and Run.
With that being said, I would still recommend either buying or listening to this story.
Understandably Lupica has to tweak things to put Dee in a position to play in the NBA once he sets up the desperate franchise idea: she is basically a female John Stockton (sees the court, knows the game, can make the pass) with a healthy injection of Globetrotter style and flair. She is also the fastest woman ever to play basketball, which works for me as the secret ingredient. However, in terms of the story "Full Court Press" reminds me of the old Sammy Davis, Jr. joke: Sammy is on the golf course and somebody asks him "What's your handicap?" Sammy does a double-take and points out that being a one-eyed, Jewish, black man is handicap enough. Lupica saddles Dee with similar baggage: she is having an affair with her coach and sometimes she gets what is basically acute stage fright. So being a woman is, ironically, the least of her problems in this book. Fortunately she is pretty much the most level headed person in the book and so most readers will be inclined to wish her well and remember this is a sports fantasy, not a social argument (Earl Monroe says it will happen one day; anybody out there got the chops to argue with the Pearl?).
I watch ESPN's "The Sports Reporters" on a regular basis, so I have to admit that the Mike Lupica who wrote this novel does not "sound" like the same one who goes from articulate rationality to passionate diatribes at the drop of a hat (or one liner from a cohort). There are insights into the world of sports in general and professional basketball in particular (they might not know the game, but these kids today are FAST) scattered throughout the book, and I found a really good insult for somebody from a farm I would dearly love to use someday. Certainly Lupica has a feel for the game (so does the dust cover, where the basketball feels like a basketball). The resolution leaves a lot to be desired, but the journey is fun and it is a good read. "Full Court Press" can keep you occupied during the first three quarters of a NBA playoff game when nothing is happening.