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- About Gerald Duff
- That's All Right Mama: The Unauthorized Life of Elvis's Twin
- Fire Ants and Other Short Stories
- Blue Sabine
- Indian Giver
- Blue Sabine Reviewed in the Southwestern Historical Quarterly
- Home Truths: A Deep East Texas Memory Reviewed in the Phi Kappa Phi Forum
- Dirty Rice: A Season in the Evangeline Leage Reviewed in Plaza de Armas
- Praise for Gerald Duff
- Home Truths: A Deep East Texas Memory
- Graveyard Working
- Coasters and Fire Ants Now Available in Digital Format
- Gerald Duff Interviewed by Nancy Stewart
- Blue Sabine Reviewed in the TriQuarterly Online
- Coasters
- Connotation Press.com Publishes a Chapter from HOME TRUTHS: A Deep East Texas Memory
- New Gerald Duff Short Story Published in Clapboard House
- Dirty Rice: A Season in the Evangeline League
- Dirty Rice Named as 1 of 50 Favorite Books of 2012 by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Gerald Duff's Novels Featured in The Wittliff Collections' New ExhibitExhibit
News |
Friday, 15 June 2012 09:11 |
Dirty Rice: A Season in the Evangeline League Reviewed on the Washington Independent Review of Books Dirty Rice: A Season in the Evangeline League was reviewed by Jay Price on the Washington Review of Books. The review, in its entirety, is reprinted below. Snapshots - June 16, 2012 You know that feeling baseball players get, the one that makes them want to linger on the field or in the clubhouse after a good game, because they sense that once they leave, the game will truly be over, and the spirit of camaraderie it engendered will be yesterday's old news? Gerald Duff knows it. Or at least Gemar Batiste, the narrator-protagonist in Dirty Rice, Duff's eighth novel — a minor-league baseball tale in the tradition of "Bull Durham" — surely does. Batiste, a pure-of-heart Alabama-Coushatta-Indian, is a rookie in the Evangeline League, at the bottom of the baseball food chain in Depression-era southern Louisiana, where almost nothing is as simple as it seems, and just about everybody has learned to live with the ambiguities. Peopled by the usual suspects — a superstitious manager who keeps a live toad under his cap for luck, a "Cuban" shortstop treading the fine line between black and white, a not-as-hard-as- she seems landlady and her temptress daughter; conniving owners, embellishing sportswriters and resourceful gamblers — the tale doesn't go much of anywhere you wouldn't expect it to, as Gemar Batiste himself might say. But somewhere along the way you realize that feeling the ballplayers get — not wanting to leave the ballpark after a good game — isn't all that much different from the reader who wants to see how the story turns out, but doesn't want it to end.
To read the review online, click here. |