sexta-feira, 19 de outubro de 2012

THE ART OF FIELDING By Chad Harbach - Book review by MICHIKO KAKUTANI


Twist of Fate Derails Path of Athlete

By MICHIKO KAKUTANI

THE ART OF FIELDING
By Chad Harbach
512 pages. Little, Brown & Company. $25.99.

Chad Harbach’s book “The Art of Fielding” is not only a wonderful baseball novel — it zooms immediately into the pantheon of classics, alongside “The Natural” by Bernard Malamud and “The Southpaw” by Mark Harris — but it’s also a magical, melancholy story about friendship and coming of age that marks the debut of an immensely talented writer.
Mr. Harbach, a co-founder and co-editor of the literary journal n + 1, has the rare abilities to write with earnest, deeply felt emotion without ever veering into sentimentality, and to create quirky, vulnerable and fully imagined characters who instantly take up residence in our own hearts and minds. He also manages to rework the well-worn, much-allegorized subject of baseball and make us see it afresh, taking tired tropes about the game (as a metaphor for life’s dreams, disappointments and hopes of redemption) and injecting them with new energy. In doing so he has written a novel that is every bit as entertaining as it is affecting.
In its opening chapters “The Art of Fielding” — set at Westish College, a small school on Lake Michigan — feels like one of those folk-art paintings in which all the people look like brightly drawn figures in a bucolic landscape. The central characters are Henry Skrimshander, a shy, small-town kid who becomes the star on the school’s struggling baseball team, the Harpooners; his roommate and fellow teammate, Owen Dunne, a preternaturally self-possessed young man; Mike Schwartz, the Harpooners’ catcher and the heart and soul of the team, who takes it upon himself to help Henry realize his talents; the college’s president, Guert Affenlight, a Melville scholar who in late middle age falls improbably in love; and Guert’s estranged daughter, Pella, who returns home to Westish College after her early, impulsive marriage unravels.
The fates of these five people, who grow in complexity and chiaroscuro with every page, become inextricably intertwined, after one seemingly random event sets off a cascade of unnerving developments. Just as Henry is set to tie an N.C.A.A. record for consecutive errorless games by a shortstop, he makes a throw that somehow goes astray, and strikes his roommate, Owen, smack, in the head.
Owen winds up in the hospital. Henry (not unlike the Yankees player Chuck Knoblauch in a famous episode) suddenly finds himself unable to throw with any accuracy, his instinctive mastery of fielding undermined by doubts and second-guessing. Mike realizes he has invested all his time and energy in Henry and the team, while neglecting his own plans to go to law school. Guert develops a full-blown crush on Owen that threatens to undermine his tenure as president. And Pella, despite her avowals to avoid another complicated romantic entanglement, falls for the woebegone Mike, who’s despairing over his future.
Using these events as a narrative armature, Mr. Harbach skillfully constructs a story with startling depth of field. Although his novel is strewn with literary allusions — from “The Natural” to Robert M. Pirsig’s “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance” to John Irving’s “Prayer for Owen Meany” (which also pivots around the consequences of an errant baseball) — it wears its literary borrowings lightly, focusing instead on the inner lives of its characters.
What makes “The Art of Fielding” so affecting is that it captures these people at that tipping point in their lives when their dreams, seemingly within reach, suddenly lurch out of their grasp (perhaps temporarily, perhaps forever), reminding them of their limitations and the random workings of fate. In Henry’s case we see how talent is, at once, a gift — offering the possibility of achievement, even grace — and a curse, forcing him to constantly try to live up to others’ expectations and to measure himself against his own standard of perfection. In Mike’s case we see how the love of talent can promote a sense of inadequacy — or nurture the ability to help others, as a coach, to realize their full potential.
Mr. Harbach understands the discipline athletes subject themselves to, and the promise that training offers — that “every day was like the day before but a little better”: “You ran the stadium a little faster. You bench-pressed a little more. You hit the ball a little harder in the cage; you watched the tape with Schwartzy afterward and gained a little insight into your swing. Your swing grew a little simpler. Everything grew simpler, little by little.” Over time, “whatever you didn’t need slowly fell away,” he writes. “Whatever was simple and useful remained. You improved little by little till the day it all became perfect and stayed that way. Forever.” Except, of course, that it doesn’t, because perfection in sports, like life, is subject to the vagaries of chance and the booby traps of the human mind.
Mr. Harbach also understands the Zen of baseball. As Henry’s hero, the famed shortstop Aparicio Rodriguez — inspired, partly it would seem, by the real-life shortstop Luis Aparicio — writes in a book that gives this novel its title “The Art of Fielding”: “To field a groundball must be considered a generous act and an act of comprehension. One moves not against the ball but with it. Bad fielders stab at the ball like an enemy. This is antagonism. The true fielder lets the path of the ball become his own path, thereby comprehending the ball and dissipating the self, which is the source of all suffering and poor defense.”
This may sound awfully cerebral — especially for advice supposedly dispensed by one ballplayer to others — but Mr. Harbach manages in these pages to make the philosophical aspects of baseball thoroughly palpable and real. He makes us feel what baseball means to his characters on the most visceral level, while at the same time conveying a highly immediate sense of the game’s drama to even the most sports-agnostic of readers.
You don’t need to be a baseball fan to fall under this novel’s spell, but “The Art of Fielding” possesses all the pleasures that an aficionado cherishes in a great, classic game: odd and strangely satisfying symmetries, unforeseen swerves of fortune, and intimations of the delicate balance between individual will and destiny that play out on the field.

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