Back in the Game
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
When a new job takes Stanley Mercer to the small town of Legion, he expects a peacful country life. Not shotgun pellets in his kitchen wallpaper, methamphetamine addicts knocking on his door, and the stench of hog lot lagoons. Falling in love with a married woman doesn't simplify matters either.
Sex in secret leads to more than he'd bargained for. Stanley is a schoolteacher, and his lover, Amy Rawlings, is the mother of one of his pupils. Amy is trong-minded and defends hat she wants, not just for herself and for her methamphetamine-addicted husband, but also for her child, Ginny. It is a delicate and volatile situation.
While trying to keep up appearances, Stanley also becomes involved in the struggles of Jim and Christine Snow, two children in the special education program at his school, and he befriends Nelson, an angry divorced father. These people need him, and he needs them, in ways that will surprise and challenge Stanley.
Ultimately, Stanley Mercer must decide how much he will accommodate the everyday lies, the awkward truths, and the risks involved when respectable adults behave badly - including himself. Because the most vulnerable people in Legion are its children.
Humorous, poignant, and uncompromising, Back in the Game is the story of rural America in the era of globalization, a place where the old cliches of country life no longer apply, but the yearnings for connection, for community and for love still run strong.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This breezy, middle-of-the-road sports novel from Iowa native Holdefer (The Contractor) concerns a washed-up professional baseball player endeavoring to establish some stability in his life after baseball. Stanley Mercer makes it to the AAA league until injuries force him to play ball overseas. After bitter quarrels with his girlfriend and boss leave him broke and beat, Stanley falsifies his r sum and lands a public school teaching contract in rural Legion, Iowa. He rents out what he learns was a meth house, attempts to teach earth science, and honors the football team's mascot Bernie by wearing a rubber pig snout. Before long, he strikes up a dicey romance with the mercurial Amy Rawlings, the mother of one of his disturbed pupils and the wife of a local realtor and chronic meth "tweaker." The determined Stanley makes it to spring until his bogus credentials are exposed. Holdefer's satisfying, at times funny novel describes a maturing pro athlete's often bumpy transition from youthful dreams to mainstream American life.