Posts Tagged ‘Harper Collins’


Last Days of Summer by Steve Kluger

July 20th, 2010 by Kassa / 2,415 views

Title: Last Days of Summer
Author: Steve Kluger
Publisher: Harper Collins
Length: 368 pages
Buy: Amazon

Blurb:

In and of itself, the epistolary novel is nothing new; indeed, Ring Lardner wrote You Know Me Al, his classic diamond saga, as a series of letters home from fictional White Sox hurler Jack Keefe more than 80 years ago. With Last Days of Summer, Kluger has virtually reinvented the genre in his picaresque coming-of-age fable of future sportswriter Joey Margolis and his improbable relationship with Giants rookie sensation, Charlie Banks.

The place is Brooklyn, the time is the early ’40s, and young baseball fanatic Joey needs a hero badly in his life. How that hero becomes Charlie–and ultimately Joey himself–forms the dimensions of the novel’s field, but it’s the way the game is played that’s so remarkable. The story’s told not through conventional narrative but by way of Joey’s abstract scrapbook: letters, postcards, news clippings, box scores, report cards, matchbook covers, dispatches from FDR, telegrams, even an invitation to Joey’s own Bar Mitzvah and the gift list from the affair.

Delightful throughout, Summer develops a deeper traction when Charlie goes off to war, then turns poignant in its seemingly preordained aftermath. It is a triumph of style, to be sure, but a triumph of style without loss of substance. –Jeff Silverman –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Posted in 5 stars, Fiction, Historical, Reviews | 3 Comments »

Almost Like Being in Love by Steve Kluger

April 14th, 2010 by Kassa / 1,324 views

Title: Almost Like Being in Love
Author: Steve Kluger
Publisher: Harper Collins
Length: Novel / 370 pages
Buy the bookAmazon

Blurb:

A high school jock and nerd fall in love senior year, only to part after an amazing summer of discovery to attend their respective colleges. They keep in touch at first, but then slowly drift apart.

Flash forward twenty years.

Travis and Craig both have great lives, careers, and loves. But something is missing …. Travis is the first to figure it out. He’s still in love with Craig, and come what may, he’s going after the boy who captured his heart, even if it means forsaking his job, making a fool of himself, and entering the great unknown. Told in narrative, letters, checklists, and more, this is the must-read novel for anyone who’s wondered what ever happened to that first great love.

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Posted in 5 stars, Fiction, Gay, Reviews | 12 Comments »