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Bleachers
by John Grisham
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Doubleday (2003-09-09)
ISBN: 0385511612
EAN: 9780385511612
Dewey Decimal #: 813.54
Binding/Media: Hardcover - 176 pages
Edition: 1ST
Release Date: 2003-09-09
SKU: 70915207
Condition: Used: Very Good
Comments: Sold with pride. No writing, no highlighting. Copy in very good condition with minimal reading wear.
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Editorial Reviews
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Product Description
High school all-American Neely Crenshaw was probably the best quarterback ever to play for the legendary Messina Spartans. Fifteen years have gone by since those glory days, and Neely has come home to Messina to bury Coach Eddie Rake, the man who molded the Spartans into an unbeatable football dynasty.
Now, as Coach Rake’s “boys” sit in the bleachers waiting for the dimming field lights to signal his passing, they replay the old games, relive the old glories, and try to decide once and for all whether they love Eddie Rake – or hate him. For Neely Crenshaw, a man who must finally forgive his coach – and himself – before he can get on with his life, the stakes are especially high.
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Amazon.com Review
With Bleachers John Grisham departs again from the legal thriller to experiment with a character-driven tale of reunion, broken high school dreams, and missed chances. While the book falls short of the compelling storytelling that has made Grisham a bestselling author, it is nonetheless a diverting novella that succeeds as light fiction. The story centers on the impending death of the Messina Spartans' football coach Eddie Rake. One of the most victorious coaches in high school football history, Rake is a man both loved and feared by his players and by a town that relishes his 13 state titles. The hero of the novel is Neely Crenshaw, a former Rake All-American whose NFL prospects ended abruptly after a cheap shot to the knees. Neely has returned home for the first time in years to join a nightly vigil for Rake at the Messina stadium. Having wandered through life with little focus since his college days, he struggles to reconcile his conflicted feelings towards his former coach, and he assays to rekindle love in the ex-girlfriend he abandoned long ago. For Messina and for Neely, the homecoming offers the prospect of building a life after Rake. Physically a narrow book, Bleachers is a modest fiction in many respects. The emotional scope is akin to that of a short story, with a single-minded focus on explorations of nostalgia and regret. The dialogue, especially that of Neely's friend Paul Curry, is sometimes wooden as characters recall Messina history in paragraphs that were perhaps better left to the narrator. But Grisham has otherwise written a well-made, entertaining--if a bit sentimental--story. --Patrick O'Kelley
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Customer Reviews
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Thank you Mr.Grisham. I learned English by reading all of your books.
Rating (5)
Date: 2010-08-26
I am a Russian Woman. 5 years ago I came to USA with no English. I started to read your books and now I can read in English the same way as in Russian. I read all your books and I can tell - You are the best! Thank you so much for your talent. Here is more - I wrote the book in English "Hi Mom, I am here in your belly". It is available here on Amazon.com
Sincerely, Lyudmyla Hensley
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Bleachers
Rating (5)
Date: 2010-07-28
The book arrived in very good condition although there was a name sticker inside the cover. I will just place my own name sticker over it so it will be okay.
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Outstanding
Rating (5)
Date: 2010-07-26
When students ask for an exciting book to read, BLEACHERS, enters my mind. My recommendation comes from personal experience at having read the book at least three times myself and would be anxiously willing to read it again. The two great lessons which the book looks at shows how coaching sports extremely, toughly can teach a person values he/she can use later in life and it asks how far a person can push someone else physically in athletics to learn or achieve a goal. Many young people can relate to football in this small town because I teach in a small town. However, they do not always see the consequences of those who cheat or take the easy way. BLEACHERS tries to provoke some of the questions that we do not always want asked. This book took Grisham away from the expected lawyer subject into a field that I love, football. We all accept the fact that the disciplinarian should discipline the player, but who disciplines the disciplinarian when he crosses the chalk line? Does this book begin to ask how far are we willing to let sports dictate our lives?
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Is the game over so soon?
Rating (3)
Date: 2010-06-28
It is disquieting to finish a novel in less than 24 hours....I read Bleachers in 10. The New York Times Book Review proclaimed that Grisham is "A sure-footed storyteller with an undeniable mastery of plotting, pacing and tone." Fair enough; he takes you quickly to the end of the book. But you think, shouldn't this have taken longer?
This is not to say that John Grisham missteps with this non-legal thriller. Others, such as The Testament suffered from Rachel, a character who proved to be unconvincing in her goodness. Skipping Christmas was tedious, but the Painted House and Bleachers convince outside a courtroom. It was a good read....but too short.
Neely Crenshaw comes back to his southern home town 15 years after high school for the funeral of Eddy Rake, his larger than life, tyrannical football coach. Many former football players do the same as Rake's shadow still falls over their lives. What sets Neely apart from many is that, while he was one of the greatest players in the school's history, he doesn't want to live in the past, in glory days that peaked too early.
It is difficult to say the story is character driven. Some do stand out: Neely, Mal, Nat and Eddy Rake, whose good side comes to light as the story unfolds, but the novel is too short and we are left more with sensations than depth. The book's achievement, understated so that it is easy to miss, is that it ends without a bang or climax. Neely does not come to peace with Cameron, the high school sweetheart who he dumped and never forgot: she moved on and is happy without him. His eulogy, the third of three at the funeral, is the weakest and tepid at best. His real estate business will continue to be aimless, much like he is, and he is now open to returning home more regularly to be with old friends. Small pleasures in a small town for one whose glory days peaked at age 19.
Bleachers is good, and Grisham is "A sure-footed storyteller with an undeniable mastery of plotting, pacing and tone." But the game ends too early; we hardly had a chance to cheer.
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Bleachers...
Rating (5)
Date: 2010-06-17
Former football players have come to sit in the bleachers of the stadium named for their former coach. The coach is now dying. Neely Crenshaw was one of the coach's finest players. Crenshaw sits and reminisces about his senior year. He has to forgive his coach for the past, but he can't forgive himself.
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