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   Book Info

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The Mighty Johns and Other Stories  
Author: Otto Penzler (Editor)
ISBN: 1893224562
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review

From Publishers Weekly
The extraordinary novella by thriller king David Baldacci that leads off this exceptional anthology of new fiction centered on crime and football is alone worth the book's cover price. "The Mighty Johns" is one of the more remarkable stories ever written on a sports theme, boasting an array of original plot spins infusing quantum physics (e.g., Heisenberg's uncertainty principle and the possibility of time warp) into this tale of a college football player's investigation into the disappearance of another college pigskin star decades earlier. Every Baldacci fan will want to read "The Mighty Johns," and they'll be joined by legions of others, because veteran editor Penzler has put together a team of authors that's simply all-star. Colin Harrison and Dennis Lehane contribute "Good Seats" and "Gone Down to Corpus," respectively, the former a fluid if hard-bitten tale of vengeance, the latter a powerfully moody tale of alienated youth (varsity players). There's a superb offering from Anne Perry, "The End of Innocence," set in a small English village on the eve of WWI. This story imagines a rugby match (fairly chosen as the English counterpart to American football) as a backdrop to murder, delivering an indelible evocation of a peaceful corner of the world shadowed by war. Legendary PI writer James Crumley tells a mordant tale of a former player, now a loser, who turns to bank robbery, in "Semi-Pro," while another mystery great, Lawrence Block, turns in the nicely black-humored "The Ehrengraf Reverse." Bestselling authors Brad Meltzer (with the clever, MIT-set "The Empire Strikes Back") and Tim Green also take the field, the former pro baller with "Whatever It Takes to Win," with tough-minded PI (former player) action that's perhaps Green's most accomplished writing yet. Mike Lupica, Brendan DuBois, John Westermann, Peter Robinson, Carol O'Connell and Gary Phillips round out the players in the most exciting sports fiction anthology in years.Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

Book Description
Additional stories include: The Ehrengraf Reverse by Lawrence Block Semi-Pro by James Crumley A Sunday in January by Brendan DuBois Whatever it Takes to Win by Tim Green Good Seats by Colin Harrison Gone Down to Corpus by Dennis Lehane No Thing by Mike Lupica The Empire Strikes Back by Brad Meltzer The Arcane Receiver by Carol O'Connell The End of Innocence by Anne Perry Hollywood Spring and Axle by Gary Phillips Gone to the Dawgs by Peter Robinson Rumors of Gravity by John Westermann These tales of football (and in one case European football, rugby) include macabre deaths, ultimate suspense, theft, drugs, big money and football. Tales of Super Bowl Sunday, NFL teams, has-been players, great fans, and final plays are a collection like no other. All the best writers in one book, edited by the famous Otto Penzler, founder of The Mysterious Press.




The Mighty Johns and Other Stories

FROM THE PUBLISHER

This book of football stories, including one about rugby, Europe's football, includes the mastery of David Baldacci in the lead story, The Mighty Johns. Football in college includes mystery and a long ago disappearance of the ultimate star of the Draven University football team. Tor North, brilliant science student and football player looks for the answers and the result is very close to home.

Additionally, Super Bowl Sunday and its importance to the teams and the fans enters several of our stories - including A SUNDAY IN JANUARY and NO THING. More college ball is the theme when college rivalries are at stake. MIT and Harvard have a rivalry, and when Harvard plays Yale, MIT wants the glory. What they do to top last year's prank is worth the read.

The naughty boys of football are the topics of THE EHRENGRAF REVERSE, THE ARCANE RECEIVER, HOLLYWOOD SPRING AND AXLE, GONE TO THE DAWGS AND RUMORS OF GRAVITY. Murder, theft, gunshots, larceny, drugs and more bad behavior are the best of football mystery.

GOOD SEATS, GONE DOWN TO CORPUS, WHATEVER IT TAKES TO WIN and SEMI-PRO are darker revenge stories of getting even at any cost. The people, the players, and football are merged into human ego and animal cunning.

Finally, THE END OF INNOCENCE by Anne Perry, recalls the days just before WWI and a rugby match between friends and acquaintances before the troops head off to war. The end of an era, the end of relationships and the adjustment of friendships come together in this tale of family pride and protection.

Otto Penzler the mastery mystery collector, has brought these stories together to pay homage to the most frenetic and inspiring game of America. The Mighty Johns and Other Stories is a superstar collection from the smartest mystery editor of them all.

Mystery Writers and their stories:

The Ehrengraf Reverse by Lawrence Block Semi-Pro by James Crumley A Sunday in January by Brenda DuBois Whatever it Takes to Win by Tim Green Good Seats by Colin Harrison Gone Down to Corpus by Dennis Lehane No Thing by Mike Lupica The Empire Strikes Back by Brad Meltzer The Arcane Receiver by Carol O'Connell The End of Innocence by Anne Perry Hollywood Spring and Axle by Gary Phillips Gone to the Dawgs by Peter Robinson Rumors of Gravity by John Westermann

SYNOPSIS

The Mighty Johns by David Baldacci is a crowning masterpiece of mystery and suspense fiction. Set on the college campus of Draven University, a forty year reunion is taking place on the fortieth anniversary of the star running back's disappearance. Tor North, brilliant science student and record-breaking football star, is determined to find out why the best Draven's football player ran off the field and was never seen again forty years ago. His search is a Baldacci genius of a story, with the solution lying close to home and under his feet. — Performed by Scott Brick The Empire Strikes Back by Brad Meltzer is a fun and twisted story of the annual Harvard-Yale football game. Electronic shenanegans are the order of the day when MIT wants to be the star of the show.  An annual prank is the object of this game. — Performed by Scott Brick The End of Innocence by Anne Perry is a rugby story from the day before all the lads leave to fight in WWI. An unexpectedly rough rugby game leaves a player dead, and although it looks innocent, it may not be.  A classic tale of leaving innocence and familial pride.— Performed by Martin Jarvis.

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

The extraordinary novella by thriller king David Baldacci that leads off this exceptional anthology of new fiction centered on crime and football is alone worth the book's cover price. "The Mighty Johns" is one of the more remarkable stories ever written on a sports theme, boasting an array of original plot spins infusing quantum physics (e.g., Heisenberg's uncertainty principle and the possibility of time warp) into this tale of a college football player's investigation into the disappearance of another college pigskin star decades earlier. Every Baldacci fan will want to read "The Mighty Johns," and they'll be joined by legions of others, because veteran editor Penzler has put together a team of authors that's simply all-star. Colin Harrison and Dennis Lehane contribute "Good Seats" and "Gone Down to Corpus," respectively, the former a fluid if hard-bitten tale of vengeance, the latter a powerfully moody tale of alienated youth (varsity players). There's a superb offering from Anne Perry, "The End of Innocence," set in a small English village on the eve of WWI. This story imagines a rugby match (fairly chosen as the English counterpart to American football) as a backdrop to murder, delivering an indelible evocation of a peaceful corner of the world shadowed by war. Legendary PI writer James Crumley tells a mordant tale of a former player, now a loser, who turns to bank robbery, in "Semi-Pro," while another mystery great, Lawrence Block, turns in the nicely black-humored "The Ehrengraf Reverse." Bestselling authors Brad Meltzer (with the clever, MIT-set "The Empire Strikes Back") and Tim Green also take the field, the former pro baller with "Whatever It Takes to Win," with tough-minded PI (former player) action that's perhaps Green's most accomplished writing yet. Mike Lupica, Brendan DuBois, John Westermann, Peter Robinson, Carol O'Connell and Gary Phillips round out the players in the most exciting sports fiction anthology in years. (June) Forecast: New Millennium should score a touchdown on bestseller lists with this dazzling anthology, which will appeal not only to the authors' myriad fans but also to literate football lovers. The publisher is backing the volume with a $200,000 ad/promo campaign. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

In the title story of this collection of three sports-related mysteries, Baldacci offers a physics-loving college football player's investigation into the mysterious disappearance 40 years earlier of his school's most celebrated star. His solution to the mystery has unexpected consequences. Baldacci's combination of science, philosophy, football mythology, and murder is intriguing but long-winded. It might have had more impact at half the length. In Meltzer's "The Empire Strikes Back," a group of MIT students attempt a prank during the Harvard-Yale football game. This trite, tricky tale lacks character development. Scott Brick reads these two works quite effectively. Perry's superb "The End of Innocence," performed by Martin Jarvis, who gives his usual excellent performance, is the best of the three. This account of a murder during a village rugby match on the eve of World War I reverberates with moral dilemmas. Recommended for popular collections.-Michael Adams, CUNY Graduate Ctr. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

     



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