Bleachers by John Grisham
Review by Gerti
Although
John Grisham is best known for his legal dramas, I recently picked up
a copy of his football-centric novel “Bleachers”. And just like
those other books of his that I’ve enjoyed most, this one is
personality driven story. The reader has to like former high school
quarterback Neely Chenshaw in order to like the novel. The good news
is, thanks to the lovingly human descriptions of Neely penned by
Grisham, I do.
The
story is ostensibly about the dying days of former Messina high
school football coach Eddie Rake. The vigil in those final days has
brought many former Spartan players back home, and they meet on the
bleachers at the MHS football field to remember their Coach, and
their own glory days. This is where the story is strongest, as these
boys sit around and tell tales, revealing some secrets and keeping
others hidden, all while drinking beer under those Friday night
lights.
Not
only do members of Neely’s ’87 state championship team show up,
but guys who played the game for the Coach decades before and after
make an appearance. Rake was an institution in the town for years and
had a winning streak of about 80 games. But he was fired after a
practice session in the hot sun caused one young boy to die of
heatstroke, and the town was never the same.
“Bleachers”
is a fascinating story of football and the men who play it, the fans
who love it, and what really goes on behind the scenes at a high
school and college level. I’m not normally given over to reading
about sports, but Grisham made this a novel I did not want to put
down. First there is the drama about when the Coach will die that
drives the action, but mostly it’s discovering these men – the
football players themselves – that is most fascinating. It is
something that women don’t generally get to see, or understand,
this comradery that comes to men in war and sports, and I loved this
look behind the testosterone curtain.
Grisham
gets a lot of credit for writing stories about lawyers and what
happens in courtrooms, but this book shows that his true gift is
writing characters, and it doesn’t matter what they do with their
time. In a novel without much of plot and taking place within a short
time frame, Grisham has built a real small town with his words and
peopled it with girls, boys, boosters, business owners, criminals and
cops. He’s shown us harsh realities and Friday night fantasies, and
in such clear, lively language that I wasn’t even bored while he
was practically doing play-by-plays of the big Messina ball games. A
good writer can make you interested in any topic, and John Grisham
certainly proves that here, with a protagonist who is every bit as
real to me as literary icons like Rhett Butler and Mr. Darcy. This
book is a must read for Grisham and football fans!