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Hardcover Columbus Slaughters Braves Book

ISBN: 0618025200

ISBN13: 9780618025206

Columbus Slaughters Braves

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

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Book Overview

Mark Friedman's debut novel is an unflinchingly honest portrait of the relationship between siblings, the heartbreaking tale of two brothers whose lives lead to vastly different fates. The narrator,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A Valuable and Lasting Contribution

Taken out of life's pages, the realism of sibling jealousy and regret is artistically portrayed in this thought-provoking first novel. I started to read this book with limited knowledge about the storyline or characters. At first I thought older brother Joe would teach younger brother CJ, a baseball prodigy, life's lessons, especially that stardom has no guarantees but anyone can achieve happiness if they work to fulfill their potential. Instead, Joe was too bound up in his own insecurities and jealousy and he missed out from enjoying his brother's success and maximizing his own talents and interests. How he attempts to recover what he has lost pulls the reader into his emotional life and doesn't let go easily.This novel does what all good literature does: it mirrors life, teaches lessons and causes the reader to compare the emotions, insights and conflict resolution in the story to the reader's own life experiences. If Mark Friedman never writes another word he will still have made a valuable and lasting contribution to American fiction.

sure Hall of Fame for this shattering, profound debut novel

Many years from now, as old-timers rehash the great baseball novels of the early twenty-first century, they will recall Mark Friedman's rookie work, "Columbus Slaughters Braves," as one that marked the author for greatness. The novel shines on two levels: as a baseball story, it rings with authenticity, and, as a novel about sibling rivalry, it sheds light on the darker side of our personality. "Columbus" is a disturbing, shattering and important book and will rank with "Bang the Drum Slowly" and "The Brothers K" in its thematic purity and intense characterizations.The novel's conflict is deceptively simple. CJ Columbus, the younger brother of Joe, is a remarkable athlete and has been since his childhood. With the focus of a natural, CJ becomes an adored superstar with the Chicago Cubs, and in so doing, elevates the perennial doormats into a championship-contending ballclub. However, the focus of the novel is not on the superstar, but on the brooding and frustrated older brother. Joe, suffused with guilt over his envy and enmity towards CJ, suffers a life in eclipse. His relationship with his mother teeters towards an irreparable rift; his marriage with a college sweetheart veers into sterility, and his own self-image is a wreck.Friedman's talent mainfests itself throuhgout the novel as the author painfully creates the terror and shame of living a life in the reflected glow of the family star. His parents acquiesce in removing Joe from direct childhood competition and comparisons with CJ; "we would grow up and have to find other ways to be cruel to each other." CJ's uncanny understanding of the game results in Joe's removal from baseball and delegation to tennis, where his desultory attempts at excellence only intensify his sense of worthlessness. Rather than struggle for his own identity and value, Joe embraces lower expectations" and comes to resent the fact that nobody "ever corralled my parents on my behalf." Joe's merciless taunting of the ten-year old CJ (mired in his first slump) results in the younger brother brutally breaking the older's leg in a vicious act of retaliation. Friedman is brilliant in underscoring the ironic capitulation of the youthful Joe to an aged sense of powerlessness, futility and pain.The adult Joe settles into his life as a teacher with little enthusiasm. His mother's patent sense of rejection and her blatant expressions of disappointment drive Joe into an even deeper lassitude. Joe compels himself to be even more different than CJ; "I wasn't afraid of competing with the world; I didn't want to compete with him." While watching his brother play professionally for the first time, Joe feels "uneasy and disconnected; I couldn't get close and had no desire to do so. When CJ earns Rookie of the Year honors, Joe doesn't even bother to offer congratulations.Joe is a despondent, lonely man. Yearning to be a loved teacher and desperate to be loved by his career-oriented and increasingly distant wife, Joe c

Millenium miracle

One Sunday morning I was browsing in the neighborhood bookstore when I happened upon "Columbus." To paraphrase E.B. White in his Elements of Style treatise, 'good things often come in small packages.' To categorize this work as a "sports" novel, a relationship novel or a work of any paticular genre is truly a disservice. The work is in the tradition of Salinger and Hemingway. The message it delivers is as much unwritten (between the lines) as is succinctly and economically stated on the page. I have thrusted this book upon three of my friends with the proviso that once they start reading, they must allocate two hours to complete the work. It is compelling, eventful and destined to be a classic.

Sad and beautiful novel

This is a sad and beautiful novel. The story of Joe and C.J. Columbus is frightening and heart-wrenching, but its lessons are truly valuable. There are many passages in the novel that are perfect, capturing the visceral truth of the anger, resentment and spite that can detroy relationships and the forgiveness that can heal.

Friedman Homers in First At-Bat

I feel so fortunate to have gotten my hands on an advance reading copy of Mark Friedman's first book, Columbus Slaughters Braves. I want to tell everyone I know about it (I am), but will only frustrate them until the book is published in February. Trust me...it is worth the wait. Buy it the first time you see it, regardless of the price. It is not a book that needs to be discounted!I don't want to say too much in the review, because some of the beauty lies in what each page offers. It is a book about sibling rivalries, jealousy, and coming to terms with your family and your own life. Although one key character is a professional baseball player, this is not a book about baseball. Fans of our pastime, however, will appreciate Friedman's knowledge and insight of the sport.Columbus Slaughters Braves has already been optioned by MGM, and will be a highly anticipated film. Funny, unpredictable, and heartbreaking, this book will stay with you long after you have told everyone you know about it.
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