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Double Play (2004)

de Robert B. Parker

Altres autors: Mira la secció altres autors.

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6211537,827 (3.46)17
Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

"This is a work of fiction about a real man. Most of what I've written I made up. I have, however, attempted no render Jackie Robinson accurately. As he was, or as I imagined him to be, in 1947, when I was turning 15, and he was changing the world. The rest is altogether fiction. It may be more Burke's story than Jackie's. but, without Jackie, Burke would have had no story. And neither would I". Robert B. Parker. In this new work from bestselling author Robert B. Parker, Joseph Burke- ex-marine, ex-husband, ex-somebody- is hired as a bodyguard to protect Lauren Roach, twenty-five and spoiled rotten. The unlikely duo become entangled with Burke's boyhood hero, color barrier-breaking baseball player Jackie Robinson, in a story that is both thrilling and engaging. It is in the historical character of Jackie Robinson that Mr. Parker finds his inspiration, and Joseph Burke may find his redemption.

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» Mira també 17 mencions

Es mostren 1-5 de 15 (següent | mostra-les totes)
First edition as new
  dgmathis | Mar 15, 2023 |
Joseph Burke is a broken man - the war spat him out with a lot of damage, his wife found someone else while he was in the hospital. So he just stopped feeling and closed up.

It is 1947 and USA is recovering from the war. Burke finds random jobs in New York and by being tough and impossible to scare makes him the perfect bodyguard for a wild girl with a connected father and even more connected boyfriend. Until he kills someone protecting her and gets himself fired and hired by the dodgers to guard their newest player - Jackie Robinson.

If you are expecting a baseball book, look elsewhere. If you are expecting a Jackie Robinson book, look elsewhere - even if Jackie is part of the book, he is the secondary character and the introduction makes clear that the whole story is fictional.

Instead Parker uses the setup to tell a story about racism and acceptance. There are gangsters and dames, there are crowds and women who want to sleep with anyone famous. And someone under all that Burke slowly finds a way to feel and even love again.

While the baseball parts of the novel did nothing for me (including score cards and so on), they did not really bother me. They mostly fit into the story and it did not really distract from the story. What really boggled down were the "Bobby" chapters - a (semi-?)autobiographical stories of Parker himself - growing up loving baseball, becoming a teenager and being very proud of not being racist. They served no purpose except to pad the pages and they tasted like over-sugared drink - a grown up vision of what his past had been and using his grown up understanding to highlight things. Don't get me wrong, all of that may even have been true but... it neither belonged in this novel, nor sounded sincere.

This is one of the standalone novels by Parker. He used them to try new genres and styles. Burke's story actually works - it may be over-exaggerated in some places but it works in the same way the radio drama of the period works. And a lot of what it has to say and show is relevant. But it gets boggled into the rest, making the whole a lot weaker novel than it could have been. ( )
  AnnieMod | Aug 2, 2021 |
For a well known author (or at least I guess he is) I expected a better read than what I got. The narrative sounded distant from anything going on. The dialogue contained many "he said, she said" after each line. In a two person conversation, I don't feel that needs to be noted as often as this author did.

I've never read this author before, but was intrigued by the back blurb, which indicated Jackie Robinson was part of the story. The story took too long to get to the part where he enters and by then, I was no longer interested. ( )
  JenniferRobb | Feb 24, 2017 |
While fighting at Guadalcanal, Joseph Burke is hit by five 25 caliber bullets from a Japanese light machine gun on the first page of Robert B. Parker’s Double Play. Though obviously badly wounded, he survives. His recuperation is harrowing (among other things, his cherished wife leaves him for another man), but Burke is tough—really, really tough, both physically and mentally.

Burke gradually regains his strength and tries professional boxing. Although he punches like a sledge hammer, he is not much of a boxer, and decides there are better ways of earning a living. He is very successful as a debt collector—his menacing appearance usually obviates resorting to violence. He gets a job as a sort of body guard for the daughter of a well connected but shady politician. His position becomes untenable when he becomes sexually, if not romantically, involved with his ostensible ward. Nevertheless, he has established his chops as a fearless, though not always wise, tough guy.

Burke’s reputation enables him to land a job in 1947 working for Branch Rickey as a body guard for the Brooklyn Dodgers’ rookie first baseman and first black major league baseball player, Jackie Robinson. Burke and Robinson are wary of each other at first, but they draw close as Burke shields the rookie from some of the worst behavior of white America.

The book is pure fiction, but plausible fiction. Parker writes movingly and realistically about Robinson’s ability and dignity in the face of racial insults. Both the real Robinson and fictional Burke achieve genuine heroism in Parker’s skillful hands.

One aspect of the book is a bit implausible. No real person, not even Jack Reacher (oh wait, he isn’t real either), is as tough as Burke. But that’s OK with me because Parker writes about macho confrontations about as well as anyone.

The book contains several chapters, all labeled “Bobby,” that are narrated by a young boy born in 1932. Bobby tells us what it was like for a pre-teen during the war growing up in all white Massachusetts. He also tells us what it was like for a young Dodger fan to follow the exploits of their talented, brave, and dignified rookie first baseman during the watershed 1947 season. Those chapters are undoubtedly autobiographical, and they add an extra dimension to a finely crafted novel.

(JAB) ( )
  nbmars | May 30, 2015 |
Read during: Summer 2007

I just loved this, I read it in about two days. Instead of Spenser, this is the story of the (fictional) man hired to be Jackie Robinson's bodyguard in his first year in the majors. He is a WWII vet, wounded at Guadacanal, and caring for almost nothing. His story is interspersed with memories of growing up a Dodgers fan in Boston. It only took me about 4 of those chapters to realize it was Parker's own memories. Although the love story with the spoiled daughter of a New York gangster was a bit of a stretch, the story of Robinson was great. Very well done and hard to put down.
  amyem58 | Jul 3, 2014 |
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Fiction. Mystery. HTML:

"This is a work of fiction about a real man. Most of what I've written I made up. I have, however, attempted no render Jackie Robinson accurately. As he was, or as I imagined him to be, in 1947, when I was turning 15, and he was changing the world. The rest is altogether fiction. It may be more Burke's story than Jackie's. but, without Jackie, Burke would have had no story. And neither would I". Robert B. Parker. In this new work from bestselling author Robert B. Parker, Joseph Burke- ex-marine, ex-husband, ex-somebody- is hired as a bodyguard to protect Lauren Roach, twenty-five and spoiled rotten. The unlikely duo become entangled with Burke's boyhood hero, color barrier-breaking baseball player Jackie Robinson, in a story that is both thrilling and engaging. It is in the historical character of Jackie Robinson that Mr. Parker finds his inspiration, and Joseph Burke may find his redemption.

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