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Eliot Asinof - Off-Season (Writing Baseball)

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    Off-Season (Writing Baseball)
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Eliot Asinofs newest baseball hero left tiny Gandee, Missouri, as John Clyde Cagle Jr., a hard-throwing lefthander who had pitched a perfect game in high school. Now he returns in triumph as the legendary Black Jack, superstar of the Los Angeles Dodgers, a stoic, menacing mound demon with a Fu Manchu moustache and a 106-mile-per-hour fastball. In a nationally televised event that, like everything else in his life, is precisely orchestrated by agent and money manager Gordon Stanley, Jacks return is to dedicate Black Jack Field, the two-million-dollar ballpark he has donated to his hometown. He arrives in a white stretch limo, glamorous girlfriend at his side and the world at his feet, but he is stung by a spate of bad memories of his boyhood, most pungent of which is that of Cyrus Coles, his fat black battery mate who had quietly taught Jack the disciplined pitching that had made him great. Typically now, when Jack throws out the ceremonial first pitch to his father, Vietnam war hero, spit-and-polish sheriff of Gandee, everyone believes the father to be the reason for the sons success. Then Jack confronts Cyruss murdered body, blown away by a shotgun blast. He has to face the fury of Cyruss widow, Ruby, and, most provocative of all, an outspoken woman named Foxx, who makes him aware that hes been living a lie. Jack flees this unsettling scene with his girlfriend for the pleasures of New York Cityuntil he learns that, back in Gandee, his father has arrested Ruby for the murder of her husband. To everyones astonishment, Jack returns to Gandee to help her. With Foxx now an ally, he sees his hometown for its corrupt racist traditions, bringing on a new understanding of himself that leads him to risk everything to probe an intolerable truth.

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title Off-season Writing Baseball author Asinof Eliot - photo 1

title:Off-season Writing Baseball
author:Asinof, Eliot.
publisher:Southern Illinois University Press
isbn10 | asin:0809322978
print isbn13:9780809322978
ebook isbn13:9780585336879
language:English
subjectPitchers (Baseball)--Fiction.
publication date:2000
lcc:PS3551.S54O55 2000eb
ddc:813/.54
subject:Pitchers (Baseball)--Fiction.
Off-Season
Page i
Page ii Other Books in the Writing Baseball Series Man on Spikes - photo 2
Page ii
Other Books in the Writing Baseball Series
Man on Spikes
ELIOT ASINOF
Foreword by Marvin Miller
My Baseball Diary
JAMES T. FARRELL
Foreword by Joseph Durso
The Best Seat in Baseball, But You Have to Stand!
The Game as Umpires See It
LEE GUTKIND
Foreword by Rolfe Greenberg
Full Count
Inside Cuban Baseball
MILTON H. JAMAIL
Foreword by Larry Dierker
Owning a Piece of the Minors
JERRY KLINKOWITZ
Foreword by Mike Veeck
The National Game
ALFRED H. SPINK
Foreword by Steven P. Gietschier
Page v
Off-Season
Eliot Asinof
Page vi Copyright 2000 by the Board of Trustees Southern Illinois - photo 3
Page vi
Copyright 2000 by the Board of Trustees,
Southern Illinois University
All rights reserved
Printed in the United States of America
03 02 01 00 4 3 2 1
DESIGNED BY JAMES J. JOHNSON
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Asinof, Eliot, 1919
Off-season / Eliot Asinof.
p. cm. (Writing baseball)
I. Title. II. Series.
PS3551.S54055 2000
813 .54dc21 99-32220
ISBN 0-8093-2297-8 CIP
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.Picture 4
Writing Baseball Series Editor: Richard Peterson
Page vii
For my son, Martin
Page ix
Picture 5
You've got to be careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there.
If you come to a fork in the road, take it.
Lawrence Peter "Yogi" Berra
Page xi
Acknowledgments
My thanks to Ron Power's brilliant study of Cairo, Illinois, in his book Far From Home. Then there was Frederick Durenmatt's famous play, The Visit. I received masterful tutoring about small-town politics from the mayor of a town in New England who insisted on anonymity. (Readers of Off-Season will understand why.) The faculty and students associated with the English department of The Hotchkiss School were valuable critics of my early efforts, as were Bill Littlefield, Jeff Kisseloff, Julian Koenig, Alexis Lalli, and my son, Martin. I am especially grateful for the bold and perceptive editing of Richard Peterson, English Department, Southern Illinois University.
Page 1
1
Shimmering in the late afternoon sun, the white stretch limo cruised by the flow of pickup trucks like a yacht on a river of old scows. Drivers waved, beeped a staccato of greetings to the unseen face behind the tinted windows, for this had to be John Clyde Cagle Jr., known throughout the sporting world as "Black Jack," coming home to Gandee, Missouri, to celebrate the nationally televised opening of Black Jack Field.
In the spacious back seat, he stretched his powerful six-foot-four, 220-pound body, hands clasped behind the thick black hair that draped the back of his neck. On his thigh, the jeweled fingers of Judith Pagonis tapped to the beat of Tina Turner's "What's Love Got to Do with It?," her seductive body moving like one who had danced in limos all her life. Instant stirring in his loins amused him, and he remembered how he had left Gandee eight years ago, an eighteen-year-old virgin who would jerk himself off in bed hoping to forestall recurring nightmares. Now he shut his eyes to wallow in the sensuality of her perfume (special exotic stuff she had discovered in India). Her uninhibited sexuality dazzled him, and because she made no demands on him, all other aspects of his life seemed perfectly arranged. "I make magic happen," she would whisper in his ear, crystals dangling from the bedposts. What's more,Judith was the daughter of Theodore ''Ted" Pagonis, billionaire shipping magnate, recent owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Jacks hundred-million-dollar contract, a neat parlay if there ever was one. His friend and old road roommate Corky (nee Thomas Jackson Corcoran) had declared Judith to be the consummation of the Six Bs of good living: BaseBall, Big
Page 2
Bucks, Banging Broads. BlackJack Cagle had won them all, for he was the greatest pitcher in modern baseball, shoo-in for a third Cy Young Award, twice National League Most Valuable Player.
She saw the smile teasing his lips and had to know why.
"What?" she asked.
"I was thinking, on a list of the Ten Happiest Men in the World, I'd be right up there."
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