Kirkus Review

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Vandal
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Kirkus Review

#1 Post by Vandal » Thu Sep 04, 2014 9:21 am

I know some of you have seen this on F-book, but Haney Field publisher has been waiting for a Kirkus Review so we can blurb it on the cover (if positive).

Kirkus is considered by many the gold standard of reviewers and a good review from them goes to the top of the list.

Well, Kirkus gave The Secret at Haney Field a favorable review. It does contain spoilers, so be forewarned:
Spoiler
"Two young baseball buffs stumble onto a mysterious occurrence at a minor league baseball stadium in Clark’s (Center Point, 2013, etc.) novel.

"Fans of baseball history will recall the Negro leagues, the alternative leagues in which African-Americans had to play in the shadows of the major leagues because of a ban on black players. Now, 12-year-old April O’Day, a hard-core baseball fan, is in seventh heaven when she lands a job as the local minor league team’s bat girl. Before long, April’s not only retrieving bats, but giving advice to the ballplayers on what size/weight bat to use, when to steal, and other counsel based on her knowledge and observations. One day she sees vague images—“shadow players”—playing on the field after the regular game ends. The team owner, Mr. Haney, sees them too and asks April and her best friend, Darren Plummer, to investigate. However, just as the two friends discover that these players are from the Negro leagues, Haney inexplicably forbids the kids from investigating further and fires them. Realizing something strange is afoot, the kids continue their efforts to uncover the truth. While baseball is a passion of his, Clark has his sights set on the deeper issue of racism in general. The book is a well-written Disney-like story—characters do the right thing, and everything is tied up in a neat little bow. The characters are well-drawn and likable, and Clark obviously knows baseball. The story moves quickly, without unnecessary subplots slowing it down, but it unfortunately lacks real historical perspective. Even just a few paragraphs on the tragedies of players like Josh Gibson, Cool Papa Bell, Double-Duty Radcliffe or others—who were forced to display their prodigious talents in subpar circumstances simply because of skin color—may awaken a youngster’s understanding of racism’s inanity. Still, in a kid’s literature market overstuffed with sensitive vampires and magical realms, it’s refreshing to see a story that attempts to be something more.

"A home run, though not a grand slam.." ~ Kirkus Review
I'll take it!
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T_Bone0806
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Re: Kirkus Review

#2 Post by T_Bone0806 » Thu Sep 04, 2014 11:08 am

Not a bad write-up at all...congratulations!
"#$%&@*&"-Donald F. Duck

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elwoodblues
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Re: Kirkus Review

#3 Post by elwoodblues » Thu Sep 04, 2014 11:34 am

It sounds like a good story and an important one for younger people who may not realize how bad race relations once were (not that they are perfect now of course). Good luck with it.

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Re: Kirkus Review

#4 Post by mrkelley23 » Thu Sep 04, 2014 6:34 pm

I like Kirkus reviews, and this is a good one for you.

Not so much a fan of reviews that say,"It's a good book, but it would have been so much better if he had just written it the way I wanted it written."
For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman

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