Beast
of Burden, Ray Banks. Banks is one of the writers that forces me to
look for ways to be sure they don’t fall through the cracks of a busy life.
I’ve never been disappointed in anything he’s written. In fact, I’m always
pleasantly surprised, even though my expectations are routinely high. Beast of Burden is the fourth and last
of the Cal Innis PI books. Not that Cal is really a PI. He tries to be.
Sometimes. Thing is, Cal is too tied to his history to break away and do much
for himself. It’s going to undo him someday, though not likely for the right
reason. That’s cryptic, even for me, but this one has a twist in the end I
don’t even want to make you look forward to, let alone spoil. Banks is the
George Higgins of the UK, writing dialog that carries his story in ways no one
else would think of. It may take a while for an American to fall into the flow
of the slang, but once you do few writers can wrap you up in their world better
than Banks.
Playing
Through the Whistle. S. L. Price. A non-fiction account of the rise and
fall of Aliquippa, PA, as seen through the prism of its high school sports
teams, especially football. Even in its heyday Aliquippa never had 40,000
residents; now the population is less than half that. Still the town cranks out
top rate NFL players that run from Mike Ditka through Tony Dorsett to Darrell
Revis and beyond. The original Jones & Laughlin mills ran for
seven-and-a-half miles along the Ohio River west of Pittsburgh. (Think about
that for a minute: seven and a half miles. A straight line west to east across
Manhattan Island through Central Park is less than two.) The mills are gone for
all intents and purpose, but the town lives on. Price is not a native but has
the perfect combination of perspective and love for the community to tell this
story as few can. Penns River is not Aliquippa—things are actually better in
Penns River—but it could have been had I been born 40 miles farther west. Playing Through the Whistle deserves
every accolade it’s earned.
Nobody’s
Fool. Richard Russo. Been a while since I read any Russo, so I returned
to where I started. Most people are aware of the story because of the movie
where Paul Newman plays the hapless Sully, who couldn’t catch a break if it
floated down to him tied to a parachute, and doesn’t really want to. Towns like
North Bath and Aliquippa and Penns River are full of Sullys, outlaws in their own
ways without being criminal and whose ration of don’t give a shit has reached
self-defeating levels. Russo shows Sully as an asshole who doesn’t mean
anything by it, not knowing when to stop teasing his friend Rub and stealing
the same snow blower multiple times. It’s a leisurely stroll through several
weeks of life in a dying town that’s still lively enough to remain entertaining
throughout.
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