Double Play by Robert B. Parker

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: May 2004
  • 288pp

    Reader Rating: (16 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Touching" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2004
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Hardcover, 288pp

    Synopsis

    1947: Jackie Robinson breaks baseball's color barrier--and changes the world. The event also changes the life of Robinson's bodyguard--and those changes can prove fatal.

    The New York Times - Marilyn Stasio

    Parker pretty much defies category altogether in this deeply felt and intimately told memory tale, which takes place during the historic baseball season of 1947, when Jackie Robinson broke the color bar in major-league baseball by playing first base for the Brooklyn Dodgers. Fusing this chapter of sports history with a hard-boiled gangster plot and haunting recollections of his own Boston boyhood, Parker fashions a hugely entertaining fiction that also serves as a blueprint for the themes that preoccupy him as a writer and the code of values that sustains his work.

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    Biography

    Featuring rapid-fire dialogue and spicy characters, Robert B. Parker's books are top-shelf reading for fans of detective crime novels. His Spenser series is several titles strong and an established classic; lately Parker has raised the stakes with two additional series (one featuring private eye Sunny Randle, the other featuring police chief Jesse Stone) that may eventually rival his beloved Boston P.I.

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    Customer Reviews

    A reviewerby Anonymous

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    July 19, 2007: Mystery writer Robert B. Parker tries his hand at this somewhat unconventional project a mix of fiction, non-fiction and memoirs. Injured WWII Marine Joseph Burke (fiction) returns from a tour of duty in the South Pacific to find that his wife has left him. Burke eventually finds work with organized crime figures which leads to his becoming the bodyguard for Jackie Robinson, who has recently been promoted to baseball's major leagues as a first baseman for the Brooklyn Dodgers, becoming the first African American player to accomplish this feat (non-fiction). There's not much of a plot to the rest of the book basically Burke and Robinson (both thinly-drawn at best) dodge various threats based on either Robinson's skin color or Burke's various slights to organized crime figures during his prior employment. Interspersed throughout the book are sections titled 'Bobby' (memoirs) in which the author reminisces about his youth in Boston as a Dodgers fan (which must have been a lonely existence) while Robinson was making his major-league debut. Clearly this is a labor of love for Parker, and it's not a bad read but unfortunately there's not a lot to recommend it either -- stereotypical characters and a faint plot do not a great book make.

    A short pop out to right.by Anonymous

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    May 23, 2006: Not a bad book for a bargain pick up but nothing really special here. No real intensity and really no care for the main character. A quick read if that's something your looking for.


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