home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=90TT0404>
- <title>
- Feb. 12, 1990: Bat Men Of Yesteryear
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Feb. 12, 1990 Scaling Down Defense
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 66
- Bat Men of Yesteryear
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By JOHN SKOW
- </p>
- <qt> <l>IF I NEVER GET BACK</l>
- <l>by Darryl Brock</l>
- <l>Crown; 424 pages; $18.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> Baseball these days, as all agree, is the national
- pursetime: overpaid and oversold, merchandising brief bursts
- of tedium between flurries of beer commercials. Ah, but when
- the world was young, thinks the old child, the former boy, it
- was all wonderful. I remember...
- </p>
- <p> And so we have another misty, nostalgic baseball book to
- wedge onto a crowded and highly literary shelf. Didn't any
- skinny kids with library cards go bowling, years ago? But never
- mind. This genial and shaggily told first novel is not only one
- of the most artful fictions of the past couple of seasons but
- also one of the most beguiling stories, which are not always
- the same thing.
- </p>
- <p> Author Darryl Brock starts off with an oboe passage. His
- hero, Sam Fowler, a San Francisco newspaperman in his early
- 30s, is gloomy from a bad divorce and muzzy from a slight
- drinking problem. He has flown to Cleveland to bury his father,
- who died there alone, and has decided to meander back home on
- an Amtrak train. Somewhere in northern Ohio, the train rolls
- to an unscheduled stop on a siding, and Fowler steps off into
- the summer heat to clear his head. When he turns, the 20th
- century Amtrak diesel has vanished, and a woodburning steam
- train--what's this?--is puffing to a stop. He boards,
- confused, and finds himself on a car with the rowdy, outgoing
- members of the Cincinnati Red Stockings baseball team. The
- year, he is dumbfounded to learn, is 1869.
- </p>
- <p> Fowler is dazed and perhaps injured (he has cut his head
- somehow), and his accent is funny. When he pulls out a couple
- of Federal Reserve notes to pay for his ticket, his money looks
- dodgy. Is such stuff legal tender in San Francisco? Doubtful.
- But the friendly "base ballists," as they call themselves,
- accept him without a lot of awkward questions and give him a
- berth to sleep in. When he wakes up, he stays on the train, not
- knowing what else to do. He learns that they are headed for New
- York, where the Red Stockings plan to play a series of games.
- </p>
- <p> Why the time travel? Why not simply write a novel about the
- 1869 Red Stockings? (Yes, they were a real, nearly unbeatable
- team who were the first baseball professionals to be paid
- openly, by contract, and who campaigned to both the East and
- West coasts that year.) The reader does not really ask these
- questions, because the narrative moves with such cheerful
- confidence that doubt does not arise. But a couple of
- advantages work powerfully in favor of the author's device.
- Fowler, having a thin time of it in the 20th century, is plunked
- into a situation in which his only problems are day-to-day
- adventures. His lifting of mood coincides with that of the
- reader, whose cynicism about sports drops away as these 19th
- century men delightedly play their boys' game. Fowler,
- moreover, is a superb observer, a narrator alternately
- sophisticated because of his 20th century knowledge, and raw
- and naive in his new predicament.
- </p>
- <p> Soon enough, Fowler becomes a factotum for the Red
- Stockings, guarding the gate receipts, working out moneymaking
- ideas (Brock has him introduce small sausages on buns to
- ball-park crowds) and now and then filling in for an injured
- player. Fowler, it turns out, was a so-so college player, but
- he has a hard time catching line drives without a glove, as all
- the others do. Underhand pitching, with no legal curve balls,
- seems strange to him, as does the rule that lets batters
- demand high or low pitches as they fancy. Fowler resorts to a
- new and baffling maneuver, the bunt, to win a game. But the
- author plays fair: he has Dickey Pearce of the Brooklyn
- Atlantics (generally credited with inventing the bunt) question
- Fowler closely about the "baby hit" tactic.
- </p>
- <p> By now the reader is asking "And then? And then?" like a
- child listening to a storyteller. When Fowler meets Mark Twain
- on the way to New York, disbelief is not an issue. The two
- become involved in a get-rich-quick scheme, and Fowler is
- further entangled with Irish nationalists who are trying to
- invade Canada. A baseball trip west on the transcontinental
- railway, just completed a few months before, is a rawhide
- odyssey and, like everything else in the book, meticulously
- historical.
- </p>
- <p> And then it all ends, too soon for Fowler and his wide-eyed
- listeners. Does the hero ever get back? To the 20th century,
- yes. But to the 19th again, to see his old baseball friends and
- a ghost-ridden sweetheart? Brock leaves us with a definite
- maybe, and the uncertainty haunts the mind.
- </p>
- <p>IN SEARCH OF HISTORY
- </p>
- <p> Brock, a 49-year-old former history teacher who lives near
- San Francisco, drove 10,000 miles cross-country with his dog,
- following the route of the Cincinnati Red Stockings' 1869
- travels and photographing old ball fields and hotels. The
- baseball details in his novel, many drawn from newspapers of
- the period, are accurate, he says. He is at work on a second
- time-skewed novel, a thriller set in Lincoln's era.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-