Bang The Drum Slowly was written in 1956 and is the second in a series of 4 works by Mark Harris which feature Henry Wiggen, a star left-handed pitcher for the New York Mammoths baseball team. I first read it in 1959 when I was 13 years old and I've read it again several times since.
It may not really be "a baseball book". The foreword is a quote from "The Huge Season" by Wright Morris:
"
.. 'a book can have Chicago in it and not be about Chicago,'
.[He held up another book with Hemmingway's name on the spine], 'There's a prizefighter in it but it's not about a prizefighter';
'Is it about the sun rising?' I asked,
'Goddam if I know what it's about,' he said."
But it's a book about people who are baseball players. The story evolves through their lives and the events of a baseball season. So it's an atmosphere that baseball lovers can relate to.
Bruce Pearson is a young third string catcher with the Mammoths. He's an unsophisticated country boy from a small town in Georgia who is completely out of place in a big city like New York. He has no friends on the team and his team mates only pay attention to him when they make fun of him. He has an abundance of raw talent, but he doesn't make a contribution.
Bruce is the focus of the book because he is dying; well, we're all dying, but he's dying soon.
It's the middle of winter and Henry Wiggen gets an early morning phone call from Pearson. Of course he's surprised because he and Pearson aren't close. No one on the team is close to Bruce. Pearson wants Henry to come to the Mayo clinic in Minnesota to pick him up and drive him home to Georgia.
Bruce has just been diagnosed with Hodgkin's Disease (which in 1956 was not curable). Henry's wife, Holly, is pregnant with their first child and he has no interest in Rochester, Minnesota in wintertime, but he goes. That's the kind of person Henry is. He's not a sweet-faced do-gooder. He's a tough, no-nonsense, individualistic competitor, but he's a loyal person who knows right from wrong and understands that people sometimes have to step out of their own box and do something for others. His wife understands that too. So he flies to Minnesota, picks up Pearson and drives him home to his family.
The title of the book Samurai Shortstop can play a big role in the book. The title mainly summarizes the book and it gives the reader two sides of the story. One is the version of Toyo playing baseball and his struggle to lead his team even though he was a freshman. In baseball in Ichiko, the seniors had taken all of the spots but Toyo had worked hard and got a spot on the team and had changed all of their lives by teaching them Bushido.
- Mrs. Dawson wants the healthcare team to do everything they possibly can to save her husband and live at home with him. The health care providers are divided; some of the members believe that he will recover and some believe additional treatment is prolonging the inevitable and perhaps causing Mr. Dawson more suffering.
Every game needs rules in order to ensure that everyone has a fair chance at succeeding in the game. If, however, fairness to all players is not a necessity, then no rules are necessary. In “Bang the Drum Slowly,” this theme is inherent in everything from card games to life itself.
They Lamartine family notices their cheerful Henry is not the same as before. "He sat in his chair gripping the armrests with all his might, as if the chair itself was moving at high speed and if he let go at all he would rocket forward and maybe crash right through the set." (444) It is disheartening to read about the Henry we know as carefree, life loving guy, who turns so damaged, and hurt by what the war has done to him. This example of Henry only shows the audience how war can completely ruin a person. "His face was totally white and hard. Then it broke, like stones break all of a sudden when water boils up inside them." (446) You sense a sign in reference to how run-downed Henry is, and how is brother only wants the best for him. Lyman wants the old Henry back, the brother he knew on that once adventures summer. Unfortunately this story is not a happy ending and Henry cannot snap out of it. Making any reader think twice before joining the
The first person narrative is moving.” I agree with both sources because after reading Baseball Saved Us I was blown away with the writing style and the illustration. It is a heart-felt story and leaves readers touched after the insight of what was a serious historical event. The book drove me to do extra research to get an understanding of what life was possibly like for those
...e insight to life or contain certain meanings that the reader must reconstruct in order to evaluate the text fully. Other novels are considered to be noteworthy because they exist within a specific literary movement, or because they reflect cultural change. However much one might argue that Erskine Caldwell’s God’s Little Acre and Chester Himes’ If He Hollers Let Him Go belong at the bottom of the literary ‘stack,’ they nevertheless employ the same concepts and exhibit the same characteristics that turn many other novels into works of ideal greatness.
Just in the introduction Chris Crutcher throws a huge incident at the reader that caught and held their interest. In the first chapter Ben Wolf is diagnosed with a rare blood disease, which if not treated will leave him with a maximum of one year to live. The reader might have found this thrilling because curiosity arises to what the protagonist will do with his short time to live. And what decision he will make in regards to the people that he loves and to the events that are soon to come, for example, Ben says, “ I’m going to feel bad any time I get anything good, `caus...
Hartwick, Harry. The Foreground of American Fiction. New York: American Book Co, 1934, p. 17-44 Rpt in Crane,
Henry suffers from retrograde amnesia due to internal bleeding in the part of the brain that controls memory. This causes him to forget completely everything he ever learned. His entire life is forgotten and he has to basically relearn who he was, only to find he didn’t like who he was and that he didn’t want to be that person. He starts to pay more attention to his daughter and his wife and starts to spend more time with them.
The first writing influence in Hemmingway’s life came from his first job, as a reporter at the Kansas City Star newspaper. The Star’s style and usage book advocated using short sentences, active verbs, authenticity, clarity, smoothness, and writing in a positive tone. This left an impression on Hemmingway that can be seen in all of his writing. He called them “the best rules I ever learned in the business of writing” and, based upon his work, never forgot them. (Online ref. #2) While working at The Star, Hemmingway made the next major decision in his life, joining the Red Cross to help in the war effort in Europe. (Online Ref #3)
Imagine growing up in a small town, with low poverty, and then becoming an adult, living in the most extravagant place with over 5 million dollars to spend. Anthony Rizzo was the man who can make it possible. Rizzo is a popular icon and baseball player to many young and old people across the world. He is admired for much more than baseball. Outside of the stadium, he helps out, as he helps the less fortunate. Rizzo was born on August 8, 1989 and has an older brother, mom and dad (“Learn about Anthony Rizzo”). He lived a nice life until he was diagnosed with cancer on April 2008. He had limited state classical Hodgkin's lymphoma. After years of being involved in baseball and eventually becoming a millionaire, he now focuses his time and money on helping people and playing baseball. Anthony Rizzo is a person who continues to impact the world through his endless charitable work.
Bruce faces a transformation through vulnerability; Black Widow is his gateway to self awareness. Bruce Baner turns green during a fight, and he remains angry even when
Nothing too serious, yet I spent most of my time sleeping and confined myself to my room as not to infect anyone else. Henry laid outside my door for hours, then snuck into my room when I left to grab more tissues. When I returned, he was sitting on my bed, waiting for me; after I climbed in, he leaned his body against my legs and lay his head across my feet. He gently comforted me, and he kept me company silently while I read, worked on homework, and, of course, slept. Although everyone else in the house avoided me like I was the Grim Reaper, Henry loyally remained at my side. He even made sure I was caring for myself, knocking my water cup onto the floor when it was empty and kissing my face when I dozed off with my glasses on. He chose to care for me over himself; not in the mindless, survival driven way of Dillard’s weasel, but in the comforting, caring way of a
Ernest Hemmingway is one of the greatest novelist in America during his life. Ernest Hemmingway was born on July, 21st 1899. Throughout his life, Hemmingway had travelled with his companions to Paris, Spain, Africa, and many other places. In Paris, Hemmingway was a foreign correspondent for the Toronto Star. On 1923, Hemmingway and his wife Hadley Richardson travelled to Spain. Then he became interested in bullfighting. In 1925, Hemmingway brought a group of American and British expatriate who later become the characters for his books. Later, he decided to write a novel bases on his experience with his friends in Paris and Spain. The novel is about a group of British and American expatriate who travel from Paris to Spain to join fiesta in Pamplona.