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Paul Mather in . . . The Nagging Question
2008-05-21 13:55
Early in Hang Tough, Paul Mather, three kids in little league uniforms stop on their way to a game to talk to two brothers who have just moved to town. The younger of the brothers starts bragging about his older brother’s pitching abilities. The three uniformed boys are skeptical, and when the older brother at first refuses to show them what he can do, they begin to mock him. He holds the ball they’ve handed to him. It feels good in his hands. Too good. I was reading this scene on the subway this morning. I’d read it dozens of times before. Even so, I started to get tears in my eyes. By this point in the novel, it has become clear that the older boy, Paul Mather, lives for baseball. But there have been hints of a serious medical problem. He’s not supposed to be playing any baseball, not until he gets permission from a new doctor, a specialist the family has moved across the country to be near. I didn’t think of Hang Tough, Paul Mather during Jon Lester’s no-hitter two nights ago, but the connection between the real and fictional pitchers began to dawn on me the following morning as I listened to an interview with Lester’s father. Until that point I’d resisted the cancer-survivor angle because Lester himself expressed a desire to move beyond it. But Lester’s father marveling about a no-hitter his son threw in high school conjured images of the star pitcher as a kid, the kind of pitcher who might have thrown three no-hitters in little league, just like Paul Mather. And Lester’s father saying that the only thing that mattered was that his son was healthy and cancer-free made me think of Paul Mather’s father, whose melancholy, seemingly overprotective presence provides the novel with an ominous tone long before the word cancer is ever mentioned. The most telling scene involving the father is the scene that I started describing above. In the end, Paul gives in to the temptation of the ball that feels so good in his hands. He starts pitching, just lobbing it at first, but soon he unleashes his entire awe-inspiring arsenal. He stops when his blazing pitches have made his catcher's hand red and swollen, but he’s on the brink of going even farther, of walking off with the boys to their game. His father stops him by calling his name and telling him to come back inside. But what’s telling about the scene is that his father, according to a feeling Paul gets, had “been standing there for some time watching.” He wants to protect his son, keep his son from hurting himself, yet he can see the joy his son is getting from playing the game he was made to play. Below is Paul himself describing that joy, from just after unleashing a breaking ball so nasty the catcher couldn’t handle it.
I first read the Hang Tough, Paul Mather when I was eight or nine years old. I’d read other baseball books before—in fact, other than Spiderman and Fantastic Four comics, baseball books were all that I ever read—but I hadn’t fallen in love with any of those books. Hang Tough, Paul Mather was the first. The story’s striking familiarity drew me in instantly. Like me, Paul Mather was one of two brothers. Like me, he was an outsider, part of a family that was new to their town. Like me, nothing was more important to Paul Mather than baseball. But the vital difference in our life stories was what drew me in even further. Here was a boy who lived for baseball who was having baseball taken away. The book was so important to me that after I lost the copy I had as a child I bought another copy somewhere. But some years after that, my aunt, an elementary school librarian a few towns away from the town where I grew up, found a book with my name in it in a pile of books the library was giving away. The favorite book of my childhood had found its way back to me. What was your favorite book as a child?
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My favorite book from childhood, with the exception of Matt Christopher's entire sports-themed catalog, was "Alvin's Swap Shop" by Clifford B. Hicks.
I'd read that one tonight if I had a copy.
1 and 3 : I didn't read Encyclopedia Brown, for some reason, but I read plenty of Hardy Boys. I've got Joe Meno's recent novel, The Boy Detective Fails, on deck. I think it plays around with that genre.
4 : If you look hard you can see, below the signature, the faint remnants of me practicing my name ("Jos"). That "s" after the "o" always gave me trouble.
I loved the Slote baseball books. Somewhere in the back of my closet, I still have my collection of those Camelot oversized paperbacks with the colored covers -- red for Paul Mather, blue for Jake, yellow for The Biggest Victory, etc. Hard to say whether Paul Mather or Jake was my favorite: you already cited one of the most gripping passages in the former, and the latter was equally indelible, with the cries of "12 in two!", the rain coming down faster and faster, and "To answer your question, Jake, you scored."
When I wasn't reading the Slote baseball books (or the Alvin Fernalds, the Encyclopedia Browns, or Ball Four), I'd try to figure out an Arborville All-Star team. I could spend hours weighing Danny Gargan against Tony Spain at shortstop, and whether using players from opposing teams was allowed.
Somewhere, I do have an old, small, paperback copy of Alvin's Swap Shop. Ah, Alvin's Magnificent Brain. Which reminds me: I also loved the Great Brain books by John D. Fitzgerald.
It's eerie, Josh, but I'd forgotten all about this book, alas, and then got shivers when you reminded me of it. As much as I loved baseball I didn't read that many baseball books as a kid but this was one I loved. I sometimes also read nonfiction baseball books aimed at kids, including one on Jackie Robinson I used for a book report.
I also loved: Encyclopedia Brown (I'm obviously not the only one here); Beverly Cleary books like The Mouse and the Motorcycle; The Cricket in Times Square; The Phantom Toolbooth; Wrinkle in Time; and I read the hell out of all the Tintin comics, and then ten times more.
I'm not sure if Jake comes to mind because we're starting with an Alfred Slote example, but my passion for baseball was strong, and books about kids playing ball were certainly favorites. I'm sure our family copy was very well worn, and I have no idea where those books are now. Maybe they are in the boxes in my garage that my parents unloaded on me a few years back.
I read almost all the same books that 10 underdog mentions, too. I guess the reading lists for kids weren't that deep.
I also liked the "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" mysteries.
10 As Brent said, you hit a lot of my faves too... and you reminded me of a classic, Thank You, Jackie Robinson by Barbara Cohen -- worth reading at any age.
and
Treasure At First Base by Eleanor Clymer
check them out on Amazon
Was I the only boy in the world who liked "Harriet the Spy"?
I remember reading either "Harriet" or its follow-up "The Long Summer" in the car, coming across an unfamiliar word and asking my parents what "menstruating" meant.
I think they both groaned.
9 : I read a lot of the Great Brain books. Right after I fell off a cliff in Utah (see serial tale in the JR Richard/Bob Watson), I limped into a Utah bookstore and re-bought a copy of the first one.
11 : My brother read the Lord of the Rings books constantly.
17 : I loved Harriet the Spy. I even walked around town looking through windows to spy on people for a while.
I devoured most of the Hardy Boys books (and vainly attempted to read them in order as I checked them out of the library).
I still call on Encyclopedia Brown to solve vexing problems at work but my reference is lost on the twenty-somethings (as was another reference to Sherman, Mr. Peabody and the Way-Back Machine).
The Harriet the Spy movie was also quite good.
I too read Matt Christopher, Beverly Clearly, Encyclopedia Brown, and every Hardy Boys book until they started releasing the "case files" books. Then it got too strange. Iola was alive in one series, and dead in the other.
For anyone (like me) with a younger brother, I hope you got to read Tales of a 4th Grade Nothing and Superfudge.
i also had a copy of Jack Lang's New York Mets history that firmly cemented my devotion to the Amazins' by my ninth birthday.
Just found a copy of the Great American Flipping and Trading Baseball Card book. Fascinating and wonderful.
We had to write to an author in about third grade, and my teacher wouldn't let me write to any of the sports authors. I chose the woman who wrote the Pippi Longstocking books. She never wrote back, so my teacher told me she was dead. According to Wikipedia, she didn't die until 20 years after my third grade.
I guess it kind of depends on what you mean by "child".
I was definitely an Encyclopedia Brown guy, and a Hardy Boys guy. I remember as a youngish boy riding my bike to the library to borrow Steven King and Ian Fleming books for Boy Scout camp.
I remember most clearly "Baseball: An Illustrated History" which had a photo in it of Don Zimmer diving for a grounder. I remember thinking, "Don Zimmer was a PLAYER?"
13 You cited a classic, as always, don't trust a guy named Bugs Meany, especially when he is selling a coin dated "B.C."
Looking back, though, it's just warmed-over Tolkien with some uncomfortable stereotypes (as the bad guys had this unusual tendency to be "swarthy" or "dark-skinned.")
In fifth grade I got a complete Sherlock Holmes reader with all the novels, short stories, and some commentary and contemporary news stories in the margins. I read it over and over through high school.
Favorite single book? THE TOOTHPASTE MILLIONAIRE by Jean Merrill (who also wrote the highly excellent PUSHCART WAR). I still think of it as my primer on somewhat progressive capitalism. And oh, the recipes! Make your own toothpaste and stick it to The Man.
I was reading a lot of Sports Illustrated and The Sporting News as a kid and rarely could commit to a monograph, but THE BRONX ZOO stands out my favorite early baseball book. If my parents knew anything about the content, they would have stripped me of privileges and possibly headed off my steep descent into sick bastard-hood. Well, maybe just delayed it, but still. I can't look at a cake to this day without looking around for Sparky Lyle.
Great book, great memories. I remember more about 1978 baseball than any other year because of Bronx Zoo and Statis-Pro Baseball.
2) Watership Down
3) The Great American Baseball Card Flipping, Trading and Bubble Gum Book
There was a WWII book about a Navy Ensign who goes on some recon mission with Marines to an island occupied by the Japanese. On the way, the sub they were on sinks. I forget the name of that book, but I liked it. It was for older kids, because the ensign died in the end.
Y A Tittle put his name on some book that someone probably ghost wrote. Not a fave, but I remember it. I also recall some football book that talked about RC Owens blocking a field goal at the goalpost, Georgia Tech beating Cumberland 222-o, Whizzer White's career and other stories from the game's past.
In elementary school I read every possible baseball fiction book. From 12 on it was Science Fiction and Robert Heinlein was my favorite author of my favorite book "Stranger in a Strange Land".
I haven't seen the Chip Hilton books mentioned yet, although I only read them as hand-me-downs from my father. Most of them, at least the best ones, were about basketball. Each book was guaranteed to conclude with Chip shaking off an injury to lead State in a miraculous comeback in the big game, which invariably took place at the Cow Palace. Chip Hilton wound up at the Cow Palace in the same way that the Hardy Boys ALWAYS had to rescue their fat friend from a band of smugglers. Taking a look those books now, the best part is the back cover, showing the author signing autographs for a crowd of grinning boys with the caption "Clair Bee knows what makes boys tick!"
The Great Brain books were very special to me. I used to daydream about meeting the brothers from those books.
I'll second (or third or fourth) the vote for Judy Blume. Not just for girls.
But I think the book that affected me the most deeply was Roald Dahl's "Danny, The Champion of the World." I don't know how many other people have read it. Its definitely one of Dahl's lesser known children's titles. I won't try to recap the plot, but just relate that the book explores the father/son relationship in ways that are totally unexpected. Having been particularly close to my dad both as a child and an adult, and having lost him earlier this year to cancer, its a book that means a lot to me. And it definitely holds up being re-read as an adult.
My favorite books as a kid were "The Secret Little Leaguer" by Don Creighton, which about a kid who has artsy parents who don't like sports and he plays baseball on the sly, only to become the best player on the team and "Strange But True Baseball Stories" by Furman Bisher (which I've got a hard back copy of).
My favorite books as a kid were "The Secret Little Leaguer" by Don Creighton, which about a kid who has artsy parents who don't like sports and he plays baseball on the sly, only to become the best player on the team and "Strange But True Baseball Stories" by Furman Bisher (which I've got a hard back copy of).
Finally limped out to DVD about a year and a half ago. Cool FX.
1969 I saw a movie in school that I thought was written/produced by the Jim Henson of Muppet fame but I've never been able to match him up with the movie.
It is about a ping pong ball who gets kicked out of the hopper for not being good enough and then goes on a journey. Does anyone have any information on this little movie? When I lived in DC my 5th grade teacher showed it to us. In 6th grade they had us goto the auditorium so everyone could watch it. It was just one of those strange things that you don't forget but I've never been able to find any information about it.
Read the summaries here and see if they don't match what you have in mind:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Why_Man_Creates
http://posters.imdb.com/title/tt0063804/usercomments
I would love to see an entire thread here about educational movies, though this might not be the place.
It was actually another Robb White book called "The Survivor." Your clues allowed me to figure out what it was.
It was actually another Robb White book called "The Survivor." Your clues allowed me to figure out what it was.
Thank you so much. After reading the Wiki I started remembering the other parts of the movie. This has bugged me for 30 years, strange how I could only remember the ping pong sequence and didn't realize it was just a small part of a bigger movie.
Another book I just now thought of was something along the lines of "Strange But True Sports Stories". It was the size of The Hardball Times Annual, approximately, and had large, vivid illustrations. The stories it told were of the famous Georgia Tech 222-0 game and Eddie Feigner and his Court and stories like that. I remember reading it obsessively, especially when home sick from school.
that year i also read moby dick. when i went to college and took freshman english, moby dick was on the reading list, so i asked my parents to mail me my copy from home so i could skim it and not have to buy a new copy at the bookstore. turns out i had read the readers digest condensed version. and like woody allen in zelig, i still haven't finished the real book.
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