GR sighting, (and baseball and a good book)
Bekah
bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net
Fri Mar 30 10:11:08 CDT 2012
I said the book used the voice of a 3rd person omniscient and intimate narrator" - wrong - not intimate - just a 3rd person omniscient, but interesting.
On Mar 30, 2012, at 7:38 AM, Bekah wrote:
> From "The Art of Fielding" by Chad Harbach (2011) - page about 331, discussing the phenomenon of Steve Blass, a major league pitcher and his sudden inability to throw. (Fwiw, if you're interested, this is the voice of the 3rd person omniscient and intimate narrator):
>
> "Nineteen seventy-three. In the public imagination it was as fraught a year as you could name: Watergate, Roe v. Wade, withdrawal from Vietnam. Gravity’s Rainbow. Was it also the year that Prufrockian paralysis went mainstream— the year it entered baseball? It made sense that a psychic condition sensed by the artists of one generation— the Modernists of the First World War— would take a while to reveal itself throughout the population. And if that psychic condition happened to be a profound failure of confidence in the significance of individual human action, then the condition became an epidemic when it entered the realm of utmost confidence in same: the realm of professional sport. In fact, that might make for a workable definition of the postmodernist era: an era when even the athletes were anguished Modernists. In which case the American postmodern period began in spring 1973, when a pitcher named Steve Blass lost his aim."
>
> Harbach, Chad (2011-09-07). The Art of Fielding: A Novel (Kindle Location 5232). Hachette Book Group. Kindle Edition.
>
> Yup - it's a good book - especially if you like contemporary US lit and baseball - maybe Moby Dick for good measure.
>
> Bek
>
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