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   Book Info

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Magic Time  
Author: W. P. Kinsella
ISBN: 0896585751
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
reviously published in Canada and optioned for film by the producer of The Natural, this is a warmhearted, homespun novel by the award-winning author of 30 books including Shoeless Joe, which was made into the Academy Award-nominated Kevin Costner movie Field of Dreams. When LSU's phenomenal second baseman Mike Houle turns down a signing bonus from the Montreal Expos in order to complete his senior year and graduate, his performance on the field declines, and he is passed over in the next draft. Desperate for another chance, he accepts his agent's offer to sharpen his skills, playing the next season for Grand Mound, Iowa, in the conspicuously anonymous semipro Cornbelt League. While the semipro circuit pays a modest salary plus room and board with a local sponsor, it also requires the players to work at regular day jobs, usually provided by the local businessmen sponsors. Mike soon discovers that the town is populated by former players who married local girls and stayed on to raise families, and it just so happens that his sponsor has a beautiful daughter. During the preseason, Mike falls for the girl, and the plot thickens when his widower dad comes to see him play and is invited to stay at the home of a comely widow. Is this paradise, or is it an all-too-comfortable prison? Feeling betrayed, Mike takes another offer, but soon finds that the grass is not always greener. This soft lob of a novel doesn't fly quite as high as the author's previous home-run hits, but satisfies with its endearing characters and baseball lore. (Nov.)Forecast: Kinsella's fans should respond well to this title, and if the promise of a film version is realized, look for even bigger sales later on.Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Still dreaming of a major-league baseball career, Mike Houle signs on with Grand Mound, Iowa, of the semipro Cornbelt League. He lives with the Powell family and in the mornings works in Emmett Powell's insurance office; in the evenings, he sits on the porch with Emmett's daughter. The rhythms of small-town life are seductive, but something is wrong: the team only plays intrasquad games; somehow the real games keep being rescheduled. Numerous former players--recruited as Mike was--have married local girls and stayed on in Grand Mound. Gradually, it become clear to Mike that he was enticed to Grand Mound for reasons that have nothing to do with baseball. Kinsella, author of Shoeless Joe (1982), which was made into the movie Field of Dreams, once again paints a very attractive if idealized portrait of pastoral small-town life. It's as though Rod Serling borrowed Frank Capra's plot to create a Twilight Zone episode called "It Could Be A Wonderful Life." A sentimental but clear-eyed parable about how we make the choices in our lives. Wes Lukowsky
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review
"Kinsella hits another home run."-- The Edmonton Journal

Book Description
"Magic Time," available for the first time in the U.S., is the story of Mike Houle, a college all-star whose baseball career is on the skids until his agent offers him a second chance in the Iowa Cornbelt League. Things turn around for Mike in the green fields of Grand Mound, Iowa-only there seems to be more to this odd little town and its extraordinary baseball team than meets the eye. The mystery begins when Mike suspects that when the good citizens of Grand Mound lure young men into their small town, it's not just baseball on their minds . . . "Magic Time" is vintage Kinsella. It is a novel of hope and promise and baseball that becomes humorous, enchanting fiction.




Magic Time

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"Magic Time," available for the first time in the U.S., is the story of Mike Houle, a college all-star whose baseball career is on the skids until his agent offers him a second chance in the Iowa Cornbelt League. Things turn around for Mike in the green fields of Grand Mound, Iowa-only there seems to be more to this odd little town and its extraordinary baseball team than meets the eye. The mystery begins when Mike suspects that when the good citizens of Grand Mound lure young men into their small town, it's not just baseball on their minds ...
"Magic Time" is vintage Kinsella. It is a novel of hope and promise and baseball that becomes humorous, enchanting fiction.

Author Biography: W. P. (Bill) Kinsella of Canada is a writer famous for his classic baseball novels and perennial sellers "The Iowa Baseball Confederacy" and "Shoeless Joe," which became the film "Field of Dreams" starring Kevin Costner. Kinsella has also written about a dozen other novels and collections of short stories on two subjects: baseball and Indian life.

FROM THE CRITICS

Vancouver Sun

[Kinsella] can juice up sentences the way a sly pitcher can load up
a ball with tobacco spit to make it break like an apple rolling off a table.

Edmonton Journal

Kinsella hits another home run.

Publishers Weekly

Previously published in Canada and optioned for film by the producer of The Natural, this is a warmhearted, homespun novel by the award-winning author of 30 books including Shoeless Joe, which was made into the Academy Award-nominated Kevin Costner movie Field of Dreams. When LSU's phenomenal second baseman Mike Houle turns down a signing bonus from the Montreal Expos in order to complete his senior year and graduate, his performance on the field declines, and he is passed over in the next draft. Desperate for another chance, he accepts his agent's offer to sharpen his skills, playing the next season for Grand Mound, Iowa, in the conspicuously anonymous semipro Cornbelt League. While the semipro circuit pays a modest salary plus room and board with a local sponsor, it also requires the players to work at regular day jobs, usually provided by the local businessmen sponsors. Mike soon discovers that the town is populated by former players who married local girls and stayed on to raise families, and it just so happens that his sponsor has a beautiful daughter. During the preseason, Mike falls for the girl, and the plot thickens when his widower dad comes to see him play and is invited to stay at the home of a comely widow. Is this paradise, or is it an all-too-comfortable prison? Feeling betrayed, Mike takes another offer, but soon finds that the grass is not always greener. This soft lob of a novel doesn't fly quite as high as the author's previous home-run hits, but satisfies with its endearing characters and baseball lore. (Nov.) Forecast: Kinsella's fans should respond well to this title, and if the promise of a film version is realized, look for even bigger sales later on. Copyright2001 Cahners Business Information.

VOYA - Bradley Honigford

Mike Houle, a former college baseball standout, is looking for one more shot at a major league career. That opportunity comes from a small-town team in the Iowa Cornbelt League. Playing ball in the evenings and working for Emmett Powell's insurance business during the day all seems quite normal in Grand Mound, Iowa. When Mike begins to fall for Emmett's attractive teenage daughter, the thought of giving up a chance at the major leagues and settling down in rural America seems more and more appealing￯﾿ᄑmaybe all too appealing. Everyone seems too eager to make the players feel at home, and many host families, including the Powells, shamelessly promote a love match between their daughters and the players that they host. Something is just not quite right in Grand Mound. Kinsella is a master storyteller, and somehow he can make the magic of his stories seem as real as a beautiful sunrise over the cornfields. Weaving together numerous short tales into one wonderful novel of dreams, hope, and yes, magic￯﾿ᄑbaseball magic￯﾿ᄑthe author nearly has topped his masterpiece Shoeless Joe (Hougton Mifflin, 1982). Kinsella's strength is in his character development, which adds a great deal to why the reader will not want to put this one down. Teens will relate to Mike's ambition to follow his dream and do something big with his life. Both public and school libraries with patron interest in Kinsella's writing, baseball, or a great story will want to purchase this book. VOYA CODES: 5Q 4P S A/YA (Hard to imagine it being any better written; Broad general YA appeal; Senior High, defined as grades 10 to 12; Adult and Young Adult). 2001, Voyageur Press, 224p,

Kirkus Reviews

Canadian native Kinsella's first novel to be published in the US since Box Socials (1992) is another saga of baseball in Iowa. Ever since the success of Field of Dreams, the film based on his novel Shoeless Joe, Kinsella has been plowing the same furrow of corn-fed, baseball-driven magical realism. This new effort comes after a long layoff resulting from a serious accident that cost him four years of hospitalization and rehabilitation. Regrettably, like a player coming off the disabled list, Kinsella seems rusty, his timing more than a little off in this story of Mike Houle, a star college second-baseman at the end of a lousy senior year who is offered one last chance at a baseball career by his agent. His last-ditch effort will put him in the semi-pro Iowa Cornbelt League in the idyllic town of Grand Mound. But it quickly becomes obvious to Mike, who narrates, that Grand Mound is, if anything, too idyllic. The family he stays with treats him like a son, welcomes his widower father with glee, and hooks him up with a pretty widow. Everyone seems too good to be true, and the team never gets beyond playing inter-squad games that attract the entire population of the town. Of course, there's a deep secret, but, as usual in Kinsella's feel-good fairy tales, the secret is as much in Mike's heart as in the town itself. Kinsella has been guilty of overwriting, but the purple patches in Shoeless Joe were amply compensated by a certain craftiness in the book's overall architecture. The prose in this outing, regrettably, is flat and affectless, devoid of texture or sense of place or era, while the interweaving of plot strands is mechanical. The result is a treacly valentine to small-town life insomething akin to the Norman Rockwell mode.

     



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