Home > How To Win Your Ex Back > Shoeless Joe

Shoeless Joe

Shoeless Joe

Date : November 27th, 2011

How To Win Your Ex Back
Review : 3 Reviews
Real Price : $ 13.95
Current Price : $ 1.88

Tags :

Shoeless Joe, how to win your ex back

Features Fοr Shoeless Joe

  • ISBN13: 9780395957738
  • Condition: Nеw
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking supposing οn mοѕt orders. Bυу wіth Confidence! Millions οf books sold!

Description Fοr Shoeless Joe

More thаn thе impulse fοr thе dear film Field οf Dreams, Shoeless Joe іѕ a fabulous novel аbουt “dreams, magic, life, аnԁ whаt іѕ quintessentially American” (Philadelphia Inquirer).   “If уου set up іt, hе wіƖƖ come.” Thеѕе puzzling words, oral bу аn Iowa ball announcer, enthuse Ray Kinsella tο carve a ball solid іn hіѕ cornfield іn honor οf hіѕ hero, thе ball fable Shoeless Joe Jackson. Whаt follows іѕ both a rich, sentimental demeanour аt a single οf ουr mοѕt loving inhabitant pastimes аnԁ a conspicuous tаƖе аbουt fathers аnԁ sons, Ɩіkе аnԁ family, аnԁ thе matchless happiness οf finding уουr approach home.W. P. Kinsella plays wіth both parable аnԁ fantasy іn hіѕ musical novel, whісh wаѕ blending іntο thе enormously good Ɩονеԁ movie, Field οf Dreams. It ѕtаrtѕ wіth thе magic οf a divine accent іn a cornfield, аnԁ ends wіth thе magic οf a son prior to a live assembly locate wіth thе spook οf hіѕ father. In Kinsella’s hands, іt’s аƖƖ аbουt аѕ simple, аnԁ complicated, аѕ thе conflict οf ball itse

Rating fοr Shoeless Joe
Shoeless Joe, how to win your ex back

Prices Fοr Shoeless Joe

Real Price: $ 13.95
Current Price:

Shoeless Joe, how to win your ex back

Shoeless Joe

Incoming search terms:

  1. Harold Polsky // November 27th, 2011 at 11:29 am
    101 of 104 public found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Some Public Just Don’t Get It, February 27, 2005
    By 
    Harold Polsky (Florida) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Shoeless Joe (Paperback)

    After conception all the reviews of Shoeless Joe, I reflect the title I chose for this review is perfect.

    First, let me state the obvious: most of the public who panned this book outright had to read it for school, and write a report on it. I can honestly say that, in my opinion, this book is not for your average high school student. The thoughts and themes in this novel, not to mention the ideals and dreams, are very hard to comprehend if you’re still in high school. Some of the life experiences, that are are required to know what Mr. Kinsella is saying, are still years away. It’s a shame that these students are forced to read something that, in my opinion, they are not yet ready for. If they waited until they were older, they would know. And they would like the book.

    This is not Field of Dreams. That movie is the result of Hollywood taking this tale, clipping here and editing there, and coming up with a screenplay that, while outstanding in its own way, is severely lacking in the substance of what this book is about.

    It’s about life. It’s about dreams and realities. It’s about injustice and redemption. But most of all, it’s about like and family.

    Ray Kinsella is an anomaly in today’s society. He is a 1960s dreamer in a world full of pragmatic realists. He sees things that most public overlook. He remembers things that most public consider insignificant. But, most of all, he hears things that others cannot hear.

    “If you build it, he will come.” A raspy, baseball announcer’s accent in the middle of an Iowa cornfield says those seven words, and Ray Kinsella knows exactly what they mean. Build a baseball stadium, and Shoeless Joe Jackson, the falsely accused and shamed 1919 Chicago White Sox star, will return to play over again. If that sounds hokey, or corny, it’s because, to most public, it is. But not to Ray. Shoeless Joe Jackson was the favorite player of his father, John Kinsella. Ray grew up hearing tales of the 1919 White Sox, and Shoeless Joe. As the tale progresses, the pure like Ray feels for his father becomes more and more evident. While the movie makes it something different, in the book it is all about like and memory.

    The like between Ray and Annie is as close to a perfect like as humanity can get. And if some find that unreal, it’s because it is so rare that it seems unreal. This is the like we all dream about. This is the like we feel we all have. But in reality, this like is the ideal like. And though in many ways it is hard to believe such a like could ever exist, in some very rare and special circumstances, it can, and it does.

    Why does Ray follow the accent he hears? Why does he plow under his cornfield, risking his farm, his home, and possibly even his family? Because Ray knows that now and again you have to follow the voices you hear. He knows Annie will know. Or if not know, realize that he has to do what he has to do. From the first time Shoeless Joe appears in his field, Ray starts to dream. He dreams of seeing his father over again. Seeing him in a way he never knew him: young and before a live audience baseball, the game he loved. Shoeless Joe tells him to end the field, to make it possible for all of the shamed White Sox to come and play over again. Then, and only then, he promises, will they consider having his father on the team.

    So Ray starts his long, slow journey, finishing the field, learning the tricks of the trade from the experts, making a perfect ball park. And still he waits.

    And then the accent comes back. And Ray is off on a journey to take one of the most well-known reclusive authors of our time to a baseball game. He plans his trip carefully, preparing himself so he will be ready to share his dreams, to open his heart and soul to a man who he is convinced needs him to come take him to a baseball game.

    Along the way, we also meet Eddie “Kid” Scissons, the oldest living Chicago Cub (or is he), and learn the small, but poignant tale of Dr. Archibald “Moonlight” Graham. The before a live audience out of these tales, and the like of baseball, and all things pure and simple, tug at our hearts, and make us want to believe in the dreams.

    And we do. And when Ray finally comes back to the farm, accompanied by a ghost from the past, and a mystery from the present, he discovers his long-lost twin brother has shown up, confusing Annie and their daughter. The differences between the identical twin brothers are giant, but slowly, they start to disappear as the dream, Ray’s catcher, his father, finally makes his appearance.

    The threats of losing everything to Annie’s scheming brother, and his business partner, the reality of “Kid” Scissons, and the tragic heroics of Moonlight Graham bring the book ever closer to its climax, as we realize that some dreams, no matter how precious, are now and again…

    Read more

    Help additional customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  2. Kathie Mueller // November 27th, 2011 at 12:17 pm
    32 of 34 public found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Glove oil and leather, and Freshly cut grass, August 13, 2000
    By 
    Kathie Mueller (Sandusky OH USA) –
    This review is from: Shoeless Joe (Paperback)

    W.P Kinsella. Shoeless Joe. New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1982. 265 pp. $22.95.

    When was the last time you tumbled onto cool, moist grass, looked up at the robin’s-egg blue sky, and imagined that the clouds were forming shapes of various animals? Or the last time you felt total freedom while lifting yourself skyward on an ancient tree swing, back when summer never seemed to end?

    These and many more childhood memories will come alive while conception Shoeless Joe. W.P. Kinsella’s fictional accounting centers on baseball legend Joe Jackson, one of the Chicago “Black” Sox 8, who was everlastingly banned from baseball. Joe’s magical appearance in an Iowa cornfield initiates a journey for main character Ray Kinsella, to not only fulfill his dreams, but those of many extraordinary characters, too.

    At first glance, the book is about baseball and Ray’s journey to fulfill the request of the accent, “If you build it, he will come.” But as Ray ventures across the country the reader starts to sense that, as in The Wizard of Oz, anything is possible, simply by believing. As the plot develops, Ray’s acceptance of the mystical, nearly religious aspects of baseball, allows the reader to revisit dreams from his own past, too. Ray says, “Your secret dreams grow over the years like apple seeds sown in your belly…sprout through your skin, gentle and soft and wondrous, and they breathe and have a life on their own….”

    Though most of the characters are as refreshing as a Popsicle or as rich as a Fudgsicle on a summer’s day, Ray’s wife, Annie is far too loving and weak. Female readers, in particular, may have difficulty connecting to Annie’s life, with her lack of protest when her husband plans to plow under their crops to construct a ball-field. But, many readers can relate to Ray’s efforts directed toward repairing his relationship with his dad, and may realize how very much this book mirrors their own relationships, too.

    Upon deeper suggestion, a reader realizes the importance of Moonlight Graham’s statement that “hardly anyone recognizes the most significant moments of their life at the time they happen.” While conception this book, a reader may experience a deep desire to turn back the hands of time for a chance to relive his childhood, or to take back words spoken in rage, or to reawaken in the arms of a like from long ago.

    The tale rides on dialogue, rhythmically slow like baseball, as Ray tiptoes beyond the realm of this world. Threading the timelessness of baseball throughout the book suggests immortality to the reader, as Ray tries to pledge the question “Is this Heaven.” The reader is drawn in and realizes that looking at this world is not the same as seeing it. Miracles happen everyday and can be taken for granted when viewed only with the eyes, and not appreciated with the heart, as well. Sacred events of planting and harvesting fertile farmland, the changing seasons, and the glorious birth of children are together to the repeating sequence of baseball.

    Author W.P. Kinsella’s strength is mastery of the metaphor, with similes stunning our senses with vivid similes, conjuring up precise, nearly physical images. He writes, ” Moonlight butters the whole Iowa night. Clover and corn smells are thick as syrup.” A reader can nearly taste a huge stack of pancakes. W.P. Kinsella draws in the reader with the familiarity of baseball, while challenging him to rekindle his dream. Each time a batter is up in Shoeless Joe, the renewal of hope hangs as crisp and fresh as sheets on the line to dry. When Ray’s twin brother, Richard, returns to the family, and J.D Salinger is reunited with his first like, the reader comes away believing that it is truly possible to start over over again.

    Like meeting an ancient friend at a favorite approximate, the reader can escape the routine of schedules and deadlines, while enjoying this book based on a summer ritual. W.P. Kinsella satisfies the reader with a significant amount of baseball facts, sifted through the Chicago scandal. He successfully concludes when the reader’s nostrils are filled with nostalgia of glove oil and leather, freshly cut grass, and home-baked apple pie. Kathie Mueller

    Help additional customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  3. M J Heilbron Jr. "Dr. Mo" // November 27th, 2011 at 12:24 pm
    17 of 17 public found the following review helpful:
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    A gorgeous poetic allegory. Ten stars if you like baseball., April 23, 2004
    By 
    M J Heilbron Jr. “Dr. Mo” (Long Beach, CA United States) –
    (TOP 1000 REVIEWER)
      
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Shoeless Joe (Paperback)

    For those of us who like baseball, who like the history of baseball, this book clarifies ourselves to ourselves. You will have complete and total empathy with the majority of the characters populating this tale.
    If you don’t “get” baseball, this book may provide some insight.

    Mr. Kinsella has written a highly original tale, written so well some passages seem to sing, that addresses such human conditions as parental loss, unreserved trust, unquestioning like.
    And baseball.
    The line between reality and fiction is playfully drawn. The author and the protagonist have the same last name. J.D. Salinger and Shoeless Joe are real public.

    The action such that it is centers nearly a magical ballfield bent in the midst of a small Iowa farm.
    The book is filled with so many wonderful moments that listing them would be insulting to the book.

    If you’re traditional with the film, “Field of Dreams”, then you know the tale…but the book is so much fuller. Richer. They really complement each additional well.

    This is a perfect book to read during this time of year…

    Help additional customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No