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Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella
Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella








Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella

Kinsella has been called a great writer of baseball novels but this title transcends that description.

Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella

Kinsella which was the inspiration for the incredibly popular film Field of Dreams starring Kevin Costner. He knows that digging up the corn field in the back of his house will inspire the return of baseball legend Shoeless Joe Jackson, a man whose reputation was forever tarnished by the scandalous 1919 World Series. The voice will speak only two other things to Ray: "Ease his pain" and "Go the distance," and yet the dreaming, idealistic man knows just what he is supposed to do. Like Ring Lardner and Bernard Malamud before him, Kinsella spins baseball as backdrop and metaphor, and, like his predecessors, uses the game to tell us a little something more about who we are and what we need.Ray Kinsella is sitting quietly on the back porch of his Iowa farm one evening when he hears the ghostly voice of a baseball announcer who says to him, "If you build it, he will come." Needing no further explanation, Kinsella immediately sees in his mind’s eye a baseball field that he is being asked to create in the middle of a corn field. In Kinsella's hands, it's all about as simple, and complex, as the object of baseball itself: coming home. Kinsella plays with both myth and fantasy in his lyrical novel, which was adapted into the enormously popular movie, 'Field of Dreams.' It begins with the magic of a godlike voice in a cornfield, and ends with the magic of a son playing catch with the ghost of his father. Like Ring Lardner and Bernard Malamud before him, Kinsella spins baseball as backdrop and metaphor, and, like his predecessors, uses the game to tell us a little something more about who we are and what we need.", W.

Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella








Shoeless Joe by W.P. Kinsella