The Fat Lady's Low, Sad Song
by Brian Kaufman
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Pub Date 28 Jun 2018 | Archive Date 30 Mar 2019
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Description
Courtney Morgan is a female knuckle-ball pitcher trying to break into professional baseball. Parker Westfall is an aging slugger with one last chance at the ultimate carrot—a spot on a major-league roster. She’s gorgeous, and he’s having the season of his life. Together, they’ll try to change a losing team’s fortunes on their way to the big show. But when tragedy strikes, will their dreams still matter? The Fat Lady’s Low, Sad Song is about what it means to be part of a team, and part of a community in the heartbreaking world of minor league ball.
A Note From the Publisher
Advance Praise
“An entertaining, sweetly atmospheric baseball story.” –KIRKUS REVIEWS
“Passion for baseball and a memorable team of characters, including a hero unaware of his greatest strengths, make The Fat Lady’s Low, Sad Song a winner.” –INDIE READER
“This book is a metaphorical onion (or parfait) with layer after layer being revealed to the reader as the pages are flipped.” –Online Book Club (Four out of Four Stars)
“Refreshing and real. Read it and weep for all of us who love the game of baseball beyond reason.” –Jean Hastings Ardell, co-author, Making My Pitch: A Woman's Baseball Odyssey
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9781684330720 |
PRICE | US$6.99 (USD) |
Links
Featured Reviews
I loved this story. I loved the writing. Brian Kaufman has created interesting, quirky characters, put them in a team in the independent minor baseball leagues and handed them pages full of challenges. At the beginning of each chapter there is a quote; some by baseball’s great players and coaches, some by literary notables, each one is a small gem.
This is a short book worthy of your time. Pay attention, there is much to be learned because baseball isn’t just “iced lemonade and a porch swing on a hot summer night.”
Thank you NetGalley and Black Rose Writing for a copy.
Parker Westfall is a career minor league baseball player facing a crossroad in his career when he gets an unexpected phone call with an invitation to play for the Fort Collins Miners, an independent league team. He accepts and that is the beginning of a great adventure of one Miners season captured in this wonderful book by Brian Kaufman.
The reader will not only learn about Westfall and some of his secrets, but also about several of his Fort Collins teammates. Along the way, the reader is introduced to a smart, aging catcher who is trying to play through the pain of injury, an inspirational shortstop who pushes teammates to put in extra work, the manager who is stubborn and won’t show his players any slack, and even some fans who instead of attending games in the stadium will gather on the other side of the river from the ballpark and form their own fan club.
However, there is one other special member of the Miners and that is a young pitcher named Courtney Morgan. She is a knuckleball pitcher who shows great promise but because she blindly follows the instructions given her by coaches and the manager, she is struggling. Parker approaches her to help and she is very resistant at first. I had to admit that I thought this story would then turn into a sports romance novel, but it does not do so at all. Instead, Parker and Courtney work on their skills together and develop a nice platonic relationship in which the reader learns more about these characters.
The baseball scenes are realistic and describe good game action and interaction between opponents and teammates alike. The interactions with fans, especially when Parker and Courtney visit the fans outside the stadium, are heartwarming. Through these and other scenes which range from humorous to dangerous to maddening, the reader will discover the true beauty of this book and that is that each person involved in a baseball team will have his or her own stories and contributions to the overall success or failure of that team.
Finally, the ending was one that was a surprise as the book ends soon after the season does I did not think that each of the characters would have the positions they would eventually take after the season. There are no obvious cliffhangers but the reader does close the book wondering if there could be a sequel to this story for Parker and for Courtney, but in their own separate ways. This was a very satisfying conclusion to a very satisfying book.
I wish to thank Black Rose Writing for providing a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.