Genre: Women’s
Fiction/Sports Fiction
Description:
“As one of the first female umpires in the minors, Margie puts up with
insults and worse from people who think women don’t belong in baseball. Forget
making history—Margie just wants to do her job and be part of the game she
loves.
She’s ready for the rude comments. The lousy pay. The endless
traveling. But when she suspects a big-name slugger of cheating, she has to
choose: let the dirty player get away with it, or blow the whistle and risk her
career…and maybe her twin brother’s major-league prospects, too.
Now it’s up to Margie to make the call.”
Author:
“Laurie Boris has been writing fiction for over twenty-five years and is the award-winning author of seven novels. When not playing with the universe of imaginary people in her head, she’s a freelance copyeditor and enjoys baseball, reading, and avoiding housework. She lives in New York’s lovely Hudson Valley.”
Appraisal:
For me this was a great read for many different reasons. Some of those
reasons might be things that would apply to you too.
The main appeal is that this is a good story. The struggle to be as
good as you can be at your chosen profession, the difficulties that sometimes
complicate that, and figuring out how to deal with it, is something many of us
can empathize with. I’ve also read a couple things lately that talked about how
fiction can help us better understand the lives of people not like us, and this
was good for me to imagine the challenges of being a woman in a male-dominated
profession. I suspect men and women are going to benefit from reading this kind
of tale in different ways, but benefit regardless.
I’m not a big sports fan, but I’m sure those who are will enjoy the
baseball part of the story. As someone who came of age about the same time as
the characters in this story (late 70s) I found myself experiencing a bit of
nostalgia that the typical reader wouldn’t. (But I refuse to call this
historical fiction for you young’uns.) All in all, a good read, even for those
who would typically stay away from women’s fiction or sports fiction.
I was also curious as to the status of female umpires in the major and
minor leagues. How credible was this? What I found is that the first woman to
work as an umpire in the minor leagues of professional baseball did so in 1972,
so the story could have happened as indicated. But 45 years later it looks like
women umpires are still a rarity with the first woman to work in the major
leagues not doing so until 2007 and very few that work in professional baseball
at any level. Maybe the difficulties Margie experiences are more contemporary
than I thought.
FYI:
Uses some adult language.
Format/Typo
Issues:
No significant issues.
Rating:
***** Five Stars
Reviewed
by: BigAl
Approximate
word count: 95-100,000 words
3 comments:
Thank you so much for the review! To add to the umpire discussion, 2017 marked the first season in which there were two female umpires in the minor leagues. There is hope for the future.
That's excellent to hear, Laurie, but also changing way too slowly.
A new Laurie Boris novel? Awesome! Can't wait to read it. She is one of the best.
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