The Sportswriter by Richard Ford

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(Paperback - Reissue)

  • Pub. Date: June 1995
  • 375pp
  • Sales Rank: 73,119
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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: June 1995
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 375pp
    • Sales Rank: 73,119

    Synopsis

    As a sportswriter, Frank Bascombe makes his living studying people--men, mostly--who live entirely within themselves. This is a condition that Frank himself aspires to. But at thirty-eight, he suffers from incurable dreaminess, occasional pounding of the heart, and the not-too-distant losses of a career, a son, and a marriage. In the course of the Easter week in which Ford's moving novel transpires, Bascombe will end up losing the remnants of his familiar life, though with his spirits soaring.

    Annotation

    The sportswriter is 38, divorced and trying to live normally so as to avoid the regret that comes with the end of a relationship.

    Publishers Weekly

    Ralph Bascombe, the brooding antihero here, is not a Walter Matthaustyle, cigar-smoking sportswriter. Rather he resembles John Updike's Rabbit Angstrom (sans cynicism). Bascombe has decided in his ``mid-life crisis'' years to write heartwarming articles for a glossy sports magazine, and in the literal world of sportswriting, he has found a way to avoid life's ``searing regret'' without sacrificing its mysteries. In fact, Ralph is comfortable all around, living an ordinary, invisible existence in the ``muted and adaptable'' landscape of a New Jersey suburb. He has two lovely children, buddies in the Divorced Men's Club and occasional romps in the sack with a buxom nurse. Then comes a crisis, with a narrative that becomes an odyssey through an extraordinary Easter week of death and renewal that brutally challenges Ralph's fragile optimism. This painfully funny addition to Ford's two other masterful novels (A Piece of My Heart and The Ultimate Good Luck establishes the author among the best realist American writers today. (March)

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    Biography

    Distinguished American writer Richard Ford is best known for a trilogy of prize-winning novels featuring one of the most unforgettable, deeply resonant characters in contemporary American fiction: Frank Bascombe, a middle-aged Everyman from suburban New Jersey.

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    Customer Reviews

    Sportswriterby Anonymous

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    June 14, 2004: One of the best books I've ever read. Every sentence Ford writes is a keeper that captures the struggles of a regular guy dealing with a divorce, the death of a child, a friend's suicide, and the everyday tension between expectation and disappointment. Throughout it all, the sportwriter maintains his sense of hope and optimism when it would be so easy to just give in to regret.

    Sportswriterby Anonymous

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    April 18, 2003: Ford does a wonderful job of capturing the quintessential man living in quiet desperation. From his aborted career as a 'real' writer to his failed marriage Frank Bascombe is a man who realizes too late what he really has and is left to try and justify an artistically unsatisfying career and emotionally vacant relationship to himself; combine these elements with Frank's detatched childhood and the loss of his son and Ford paints a stunning picture of man lost in his own maudlin solipsism.


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