Perma-Bound Edition ©1993 | -- |
Paperback ©1993 | -- |
Seth struggles to understand his best friend, Jimmy, and to come to terms with his own father's death. The boys play on baseball teams together, and there is no shortage of play-by-play action in the narrative. When Jimmy is rejected by his father and becomes involved with alcohol, Seth alternately tries to protect him and rejects his behavior. The compelling coming-of-age novel offers a sensitive, moving portrait of adolescence.
Kirkus ReviewsFrom the author of On the Devil's Court (1989), another story in which sports and life intertwine. Jimmy Winter, his eyes fixed on the major leagues, accepts his father's harsh coaching as the only way to develop that special edge. Develop it he does, though their personal relationship founders on the rocks of his father's alcoholism. Jimmy fires up new friend Seth with the love of baseball, and the two play through Little League, Babe Ruth League and into high school. Seth is competent but not gifted, though he discovers that the benefits of hard work and concentration on the field carry over to school. His admiration for Jimmy's potential becomes mixed with more complex feelings when he learns that his friend is drinking and cutting class. After that revelation, the story moves with heavy inevitability: the varsity team puts together a championship season, but Jimmy kills himself in a car accident just before the clincher. Covering well worked thematic territory, Deuker offers readers few surprises in this outing, but the baseball action is believable and the contrasts between several sets of characters are thoughtfully explored. (Fiction. 12-14)"
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)This compelling tale of baseball and friendship, PW said, hits a home run'' with its
action worthy of the sports page.'' Ages 12-up. (May)
Readers who enjoyed Deuker's On the Devil's Court (1989) will be lining up to read his second novel, which explores the five-year friendship of two boys. Baseball has been the basis for Seth and Jimmy's friendship, from their first meeting on a practice field when they were 12 through their time together in summer leagues and on high school teams. Jimmy taught Seth how to play the game, encouraged him to excel, pushed him to his limits, and taught him to love the sport. The game also bridged the problems and differences in their lives: Seth's father's death, Jimmy's father's alcoholism and Jimmy's own drinking problem, and Seth's academic achievement. When Jimmy's drinking leads to a tragic accident, Seth realizes that their shared love of the game is a link that can't be broken and that what he gained from his friendship with Jimmy will never be lost. Deuker provides sports action and playing tips enough to appeal to even reluctant readers and surrounds them with a sensitive, fast-paced plot filled with well-developed characters. (Reviewed June 1993)
School Library JournalGr 6-10-- On the day Seth Barham met Jimmy Winter, his life changed. Seth had been an unfocused, confused pre-teen who had never come to terms with his father's death when he was seven. He meets Jimmy in a park as Jimmy's overbearing father is putting his son through intense baseball drills. As their friendship develops, Jimmy's intensity and self-assurance on the playing field spills over into Seth's life, helping him to blossom as a student and a baseball player. However, Jimmy's home life begins to unravel when his parents divorce. Also, he is suspended from the team when he develops a drinking problem. Seth withstands peer pressure to drink, and, with his mother's support, begins to accept his father's death. However, his biggest battle comes when he must cope with Jimmy's death in an auto accident. Baseball action permeates the story, increasing the novel's interest to those readers familiar with the sport but setting up possible barriers for the uninitiated. Seth's simply told, often moving first-person narrative is meant to be his way of accepting the two losses in his life. However, although the semi-therapeutic story covers three years in the boys' baseball lives, it largely ignores their school lives and some readers may wonder what else they did. Mixing themes common to many YA coming-of-age titles with strong character development, this easy-to-read and well-paced novel will involve many readers. --Jack Forman, Mesa College Library, San Diego
Horn Book (Thu Apr 01 00:00:00 CST 1993)
Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
ALA Booklist
School Library Journal
Seth and Jimmy both live and breathe baseball, but while Seth struggles to be good enough to make the varsity team, Jimmy, a natural, looks like he's on is way to becoming a major league star some day. Still, their shared passion for the game unites them in an life-long friendship– both on and off the field. But when Seth experiences an unthinkable loss, he's forced to find his own personal strength– and he'll need a friend to do it.
An ALA Best Book for Young Adults
An ALA Best Book for Reluctant Readers
A New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Book of the Year