Imatge de l'autor

Mark Harris (1) (1922–2007)

Autor/a de Bang the Drum Slowly

Per altres autors anomenats Mark Harris, vegeu la pàgina de desambiguació.

25+ obres 859 Membres 22 Ressenyes 2 preferits

Sobre l'autor

Crèdit de la imatge: my photo

Sèrie

Obres de Mark Harris

Bang the Drum Slowly (1956) 345 exemplars
The Southpaw (1953) 175 exemplars
It Looked Like For Ever (1979) 66 exemplars
A Ticket for a Seamstitch (1957) 53 exemplars
Henry Wiggen's Books (1977) 27 exemplars
Speed (1990) 22 exemplars
Wake Up, Stupid (1959) 21 exemplars
Lying in Bed (1984) 20 exemplars
Saul Bellow, Drumlin Woodchuck (1980) 19 exemplars
City of Discontent (1952) 14 exemplars
The Goy (1970) 12 exemplars
Something About a Soldier (1958) 11 exemplars
The Tale Maker (1994) 7 exemplars

Obres associades

Baseball: A Literary Anthology (2002) — Col·laborador — 337 exemplars
The Baseball Reader: Favorites from the Fireside Book of Baseball (1980) — Col·laborador — 103 exemplars
The Best American Short Stories 1961 (1961) — Col·laborador — 10 exemplars

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Membres

Ressenyes

Started off very slow, and I really wasn't into it. Even contemplated not finishing it for a while, but boy, would that have been a mistake! I don't remember exactly where, but it got a lot better, quite quickly. It's a great story about life and death, and friendships with a baseball backdrop, but you need not be a baseball fan to enjoy it, although it probably would help.
 
Marcat
MrMet | Hi ha 8 ressenyes més | Apr 28, 2023 |
Henry Wiggen, hero of The Southpaw and the best-known fictional baseball player in America, is back again, throwing a baseball “with his arm and his brain and his memory and his bluff for the sake of his pocket and his family.” More than a novel about baseball, Bang the Drum Slowly is about the friendship and the lives of a group of men as they each learn that a teammate is dying of cancer.
 
Marcat
Gmomaj | Hi ha 8 ressenyes més | Nov 12, 2019 |
This is the last Henry Wiggen story. This time when we meet up with Henry, he is a flagging veteran, just let go as lefty pitcher for the New York Mammoths. In this day and age he would have been traded years ago, but in the world of Mark Harris, Wiggen hangs on. He still wants to play, even if it means playing in an obscure Japanese town no one can find on a map, or as a relief pitcher anywhere else. However, Henry is now 39 years old with looming health and family issues. His prostate is squawking and his daughter, Hilary, is a screamer; she screams for no apparent reason. Henry has to adjust to being a normal citizen without the perks he once had as a famous athlete (although, interestingly enough, he didn't know what being famous actually meant). A good portion of the story is Henry trying to get back into baseball while at the same time trying to mollify his screaming daughter.… (més)
 
Marcat
SeriousGrace | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Dec 13, 2013 |
When we next meet up with Henry Wiggen he is still pitching for the New York Mammoth baseball team. He is still selling insurance during the off-season. He also still writing (and getting published so his nickname of Henry "Author" Wiggen is getting around). He is now a veteran ballplayer. The plot of Ticket for a Seamstitch is super simple. A seamstress fan of Wiggen writes to ask for a ticket to a game on the fourth of July. Fellow (and very single) teammate, Piney, reads the letter and becomes involved, thinking the girl is a "looker." He has hopes she might be a potential girlfriend in the future. Only when she arrives, all the way from California, she is not the girl he thought she was and very married Wiggen is left to entertain her. This third book in the series is lighter on the play by play baseball and took me only an afternoon to read.… (més)
½
 
Marcat
SeriousGrace | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | Nov 25, 2013 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
25
També de
3
Membres
859
Popularitat
#29,780
Valoració
3.9
Ressenyes
22
ISBN
161
Llengües
4
Preferit
2

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