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Eliot asinof
Eliot asinof












eliot asinof

Over a long dinner at the late, great Printer’s Row restaurant, we were treated to tales of his screenwriting days in Hollywood before he was blacklisted. The show was enjoying its Chicago run then, and I was there with SIU Press to launch a series on literary baseball writing that included a new edition of Asinof’s first novel, Man on Spikes.Īuthor-publisher relations can sometimes be a bit fraught, but spending time with Asinof was effortless.

eliot asinof

(Apr.The news of Eliot Asinof’s passing earlier this week brought back memories of having spent time with him at a BEA in the late 90s. The novel comes to a tidy conclusion, but its sparkling, suspenseful passages about baseball are overwhelmed by Asinsof's more sentimental themes. Readers will intuit the mystery's solution, especially given the heavy foreshadowing weighing down the relationship between Jack and his overbearing father, who's the sheriff of Gandee, above suspicion although virulently racist. A mouthy female reporter for the local newspaper, who Jack disastrously dated in high school, gets irritatingly involved with Jack's life. Jack is sure that Ruby is innocent, so he leaves his plush, glamorous environment to take time to exonerate her. Cyrus, a black auto mechanic who never had a chance of turning pro, is murdered on the way to the ceremony, and Cyrus's upright, truthful wife, Ruby, is charged with the murder. But the returning hero has a secret he'd just as soon forget: as a teen he was just an average pitcher, and it was only through the brilliant coaching of his high school batting mate, Cyrus Coles, that he became the star he is. He donates $2 million to build a baseball field in his dumpy, backwater home town of Gandee, Mo., then returns there for the first time since high school to celebrate the opening of Black Jack Field.

eliot asinof

He has a $100-million Dodgers contract, and with a beautiful girlfriend who happens to be the Dodger owner's daughter, product endorsements, tours and publicity, he is poised to earn further millions. John Clyde Cagle Jr., aka ""Black Jack,"" is one of baseball's most successful pitchers. It's admirably ambitious, but it shies away from the kind of kinetic sports descriptions Asinof is known for. Asinof's new novel, about a baseball superstar's reckoning with his past, falls in between. Eight Men Out, Asinof's acclaimed nonfiction account of the 1919 Black Sox Scandal, is his primary claim to fame his first foray into fiction, Man on Spikes, was not as successful, commercially or critically.














Eliot asinof