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OUTDOORSThe Girl Who Loved Tom GordonStephen King (Simon and Schuster)
Consider what has happened since "The Girl Who Loved
Tom Gordon" hit the shelves: soon after the book’s April
release, Sox pitcher Tom Gordon went on the 15-day
disabled list with a bum elbow. He returned and seemed as
good as new, until his consecutive save streak – a major
league record – was ended in the most horrible fashion,
with two outs in the ninth, in Fenway, at the hands of the
Sox historical rival, the Atlanta (formerly Boston) Braves.
Then he went down to injury again, and this time it looks as
if he might need surgery. Then, news comes through that King himself has fallen to
the curse of the Bambino: last month, while strolling down
the street in his pastoral hometown of Lewiston, Maine,
King was hit by a runaway Dodge Caravan. (Will there be a
sequel to "Misery"?) His spirits seem intact, but he remains
in the hospital with broken bones and a punctured lung.
Clearly some subjects carry too much supernatural power
to be tampered with. One of these is the Red Sox. King is no nouveau Sox fan. He writes about them
frequently, and his homely mug can often be seen at
Fenway Park. Rumor has it that upon waking after surgery,
King asked about the Red Sox. He has said before that the
ultimate horror show involving the Sox will come if they
ever play against the equally stricken Chicago Cubs in a
World Series, which will remain forever tied at three games
to three, with some natural disaster preventing either from
emerging victorious. Despite all of this, or perhaps because of it, King chose to
use the Red Sox's ace reliever Tom "Flash" Gordon as his
hook into the supernatural in his latest novel. The girl of
the title is nine-year old Trisha McFarland, whose mother
has taken Trisha and her brother on a hiking trip on the
northern end of the Appalachian Trail. The brother and the
mom bicker about her divorce from the children's father,
and to escape the squabble Trisha goes off the side of the
trail. Predictably, she gets hopelessly and frightfully lost. The book's plot centers around Trisha's desperate struggle
to survive as she gets ever further mired in the depths of
the dense, dank, and foreboding wilderness of western
Maine and eastern New Hampshire. On her amazing
Walkman, she can capture signals from the various
stations that carry Red Sox games, and one of the things
that keeps her sane is hearing about her favorite player,
number 36, Tom Gordon, on whom she has something of a
preadolescent crush. As the days pass and her food supplies dwindle, Trisha
relies more and more upon an innate survival instinct
coupled with her growing dementia, which has her
occasionally seeing Gordon, who appears to instruct,
guide, and encourage her. King is pretty heavy-handed
with the metaphor of Gordon-as-religious-figure. After each
of Gordon's saves, he points at the sky to give thanks to
the Lord, and King takes off from this image to explore the
various manifestations of faith. Though King’s protagonist doesn't buy into this faith
(because of her father's beer-drenched reflections on the
subject), her preternatural belief in Gordon as a mythic
figure carries her through. In the woods she wears a
replica Gordon jersey and a hat that Flash signed in
Fenway the previous season; these quasi-religious totems
coupled with Gordon's ghostly presence seem to serve as
King's way of exploring how humans react with superstition
in times of extreme duress. It had been years since I'd read anything King has written,
but this book is typical of what I recall of his works. His
prose is straightforward and goes down easily. The book's
chapters, somewhat affectedly, are numbered according to
innings; occasionally King will break an inning into halves.
The baseball imagery is pervasive, suiting King's parable,
albeit at times gratuitously so. The book reads quickly, and
is appropriate for the beach or the airplane. Maybe someday King will write a book with the Red Sox
fully at the center of it. However, I dread the injuries, losing
streaks, and other swarms of locusts that such a project
would bring about, given the horrible luck visited upon King
and my team after this breezy and fun but unsatisfying and
minor dalliance with Soxiana.
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MORE OUTDOORSHighways to Hell America's Cup Linda Greenlaw A Walk in the Woods MORE BY DEREK CATSAM |
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