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John Grisham Amazon Q & A with John Grisham Q: What's your favorite baseball team? A: St. Louis Cardinals. My father was a Cardinals fan, as was my grandfather. When I was a kid growing up in the rural south, everyone listened to the Cardinals on the radio. We seldom missed a game. Q: What's your most memorable game--as player, coach, or fan? A: I played a lot of baseball when I was a kid and teenager, but I do not recall making any spectacular plays. When I coached baseball, my teams usually lost. As a fan, Game 6 of the World Series last year, Cardinals vs. Rangers, comes to mind. Q: Have you played or coached baseball? What position? A: I was an average high school baseball player with big dreams. I tri... full descriptioned to play in college, but got myself cut in the fall practices. I was an outfielder with a weak arm. Q: Why are there seemingly more baseball books--both fiction and nonfiction--than other sports? A: Baseball is a uniquely American sport, and it is the oldest organized sport in the country. It has a rich and colorful history, and up until the last generation, it was the most popular sport for kids to play. Sadly, that is changing. Q: Who was the Joe Castle of your childhood--a player you revered? And was there a Warren Tracey? A: I was never much of a Red Sox fan, but I adored Tony Conigliaro. He was a great player, and a certain Hall of Famer. The beanball that struck him in the eye ruined a great career. Q: While researching Calico Joe, did you attend or watch games? Did you write any of the book at a stadium? A: I only write in one place, and that's my office at home. I take a lot of notes when I travel around and research, which I did for Calico Joe. Q: Did you employ any other behind-the-scenes techniques--watch old footage, interview players, read old issues of Sports Illustrated? A: Yes, all of the above. I interviewed several former major league players. I read lots of old magazines, news articles, and books about baseball, and specifically, The Code. I found some footage of famous beanball wars of recent times. Q: Do the beanball or the brushback have a place in today's baseball? Even Joe seemed to accept them as "part of the game." A: Yes. There are times in baseball when a particular hitter must get hit. There are many reasons for this, but retaliation is always a factor. Problems arise though when the pitch is above the shoulders, and aimed at batter's head. If a pitcher does this intentionally, and they do it all the time, they are fooling around with a player's career. Throwing at a batter's head is never acceptable in baseball, even as retaliation. Q: Have you ever been hit? Have you ever hit someone else? A: Every baseball player gets hit. Fortunately, I was never beaned in the head. Our coaches never let me anywhere near the pitcher's mound, so I never hit a batter. Q: Do you love baseball? If so, why? Any concerns that the sport and its stars (as Warren gripes in the book) have changed? A: I still love baseball but it's not the game of my youth. The pro game today is dominated by money and, frankly, there is a lot of bad baseball being played. I find it frustrating, but I always get pumped at World Series time. College baseball is far more exciting. (less description)
Author: John Grisham
Categories: Genre Fiction, Thrillers, Literature & Fiction, Mystery & Thrillers