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Now Batting For Boston: More Stories By J. G. Hayes | 
enlarge | Author: J. G. Hayes Publisher: Southern Tier Editions Category: Book
List Price: $9.95 Buy New: $2.70 You Save: $7.25 (73%)
New (7) Used (9) from $0.43
Avg. Customer Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 792611
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 170 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 6.1 x 0.5
ISBN: 1560235225 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9781560235224 ASIN: 1560235225
Publication Date: July 13, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: new book, never been opened-great value
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Book Description To thine own self be trueno matter what it costs Acclaimed author J. G. Hayes returns to the gritty streets of South Boston for the much-anticipated sequel to his critically heralded debut, This Thing Called Courage. Now Batting for Boston: More Stories by J.G. Hayes goes home to the bars, housing projects and D Street bedrooms of Southie, where you can feel like a stranger in your own skin, just trying to survive growing up gay among working-class Irish-Catholics who don't want to hear the hard truths about their sons. Unlike my father, it wasn't only Life I hoped to jump into during my long light-gazing vigils on the roof. In particular, it was a particular bar in a particular part of town, a bar whose blacked-out windows were lit up like Christmas every day of the year. It was a bar for people like me. For although I may have looked like my father, and loved baseball like my father, I was not heterosexual, like my father. And all the prayers to St. Anthony in the world hadn't changed that. You find them anywhere in Southiefrom Castle Island to Carson Beach, from Sunday mass at St. Anthony's to the Tuesday night hack league at the HockeyTown rink. Men, young and not so young, struggle with their sexuality, outsiders in their own homes searching for someplace to belong. Now Batting for Boston is a moving collection of stories, intense and gripping, with no guarantees of a happy ending. Just like life in South Boston. With Terry, it was like, Jesus; it was like the whole world went away. When our lips met for the first time. It was like ... it was like you could stay that way forever. It was like you fell into a different planet, you fell through a hole in the ground and came to the center of the earth and you were still falling, wondering but not really caring when you were gonna land. Electricity. Like someone put one of them joke handshake-buzzer things up against your mouth and clicked it on. Booklist said of Joe Hayes's first collection of short stories, This Thing Called Courage: "We impatiently await (his) next effort!" The wait is over. Now Batting for Boston is a worthy successor to Hayes's stunning debut, packed with the same brutal honesty, the same muscular passion, and the same tough-but-tender prose that made his first book an essential read. From the author: "Tragically, South Boston was the scene of the deaths of over three hundred young men several years ago, due to drug overdose, alcohol-related accidents, violence, and suicide. During an especially painful six-month period, in a community that has known more than its share of pain, seven young men killed themselves. While obviously not all of these young men were gay-we don't even know if any of them were-the National Institutes of Health have said that two-thirds of all teen and youth suicides are committed by gay and lesbian youth. So perhaps it's simply a matter of doing the math. "South Boston was also the scene of some very ugly anti-gay demonstrations and vociferations during the controversial Irish-American Gay Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston's participation in the annual St. Patrick's Day Parade a decade ago. Some residents opposed this participation because they saw the group as yet another outside force trying to impose its will on a community that traditionally likes to be let alone. But many people viewed the entire affair as a virulent and especially bigoted example of the homophobia that can and does lead to bewilderment, estrangement, and even suicide among gay and lesbian youth. But certainly South Boston has not cornered the market on homophobia, and in that respect my stories could be set almost anywhere. There are many gay men and women from South Boston who have received unwavering support and love from their families, if not from the community at large."
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Hayes makes us FEEL his character's emotions ... not just read them. November 23, 2006 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I read this book in 2005 and remember at the time being very impressed with it. From the simple and touching sweetness of ONCE ON CHRISTMAS EVE and the eerie, transcendent beauty of THE GOLDEN APPLES OF THE SUN to truly being taken on a mind trip inside the psyche of the title character in LUGHEAD (a wrenchingly deliberate and painstaking journey at times but - jeez! - what a sublime payoff!), I found myself quite moved at times. I was amazed at the way Hayes made me not just read about the emotions his characters were feeling; instead his words, his dialogues enabled me (my gut, my heart) to actually feel their pangs, their love, their hurt, their guilt and their exhilaration.
A few weeks ago I finished reading his new novel, A MAP OF THE HARBOR ISLANDS, and was so thoroughly exalted (no other word will do) by the experience that I felt I had to go back and read his two short story collections again. Honestly, I don't think I've been quite so deeply and tenderly embraced by the work of a gay author since I read the first of Ethan Mordden's "Buddy" titles nearly twenty years ago. Hayes' work may be set in South Boston but, really, it is beyond limitations of place, beyond limitations of time, beyond limitations of genre.
At some point I want to articulate my feelings about his new novel but while those feelings are manifestly real, I'm just not quite able to verbalize them yet. I think I'll have to allow myself the joy of re-reading it first. Rest with assurance, his two story collections are everything that the overwhelmingly 5-star reviews here have called them. And more.
Really wonderful... May 18, 2006 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
The first of these stories, "Now Batting for Boston," made me want to do cartwheels; it was so wonderfully written and expressed such wonderful sentimentality of a father-son relationship -- and I am quite a sop for that since I did not have a good relationship with my father! His father was wounded veteran, severly damaged by war. This book, Joe's second, is better than his first ("A thing called Courage") though it was written at the same time. The first books was not as well developed as this one IMHO. Joe's writing is passionate and crystaline with depth and mystery, sometimes needing interpretation. Joe visited with the book group I am in (I live in Boston near where he lives) and his presence was wonderful. He helped us to understand from whence his writings come and he helped to clear us some of the mystery with a story or two. I commend his work to you without hesitation. Check out his web site also, he is quite a nice painter and he is passionately anti war.
Now Batting for Boston May 10, 2006 Really enjoyed this book of short stories. The characters came alive and were portrayed in a heartfelt, believable way, despite the constraints of a short story format. Although set in Boston, the stories have a universal appeal anywhere in our world.
I Don't Get It !! April 19, 2006 1 out of 7 found this review helpful
I tried. I really tried to get into the stories of this collection. Unfortunately, I was totally turned off by the self-pity of the characters in the various stories. I too come from a very modest, almost crushing poverty, but I have never let it define me as so many of the characters do in this anthology. This is not my idea of written entertainment. Angist goes just so far..and then it becomes tedious.
Sexy, Moving, Heartbreaking, Funny & True---J.G. Hayes is the Real Deal November 5, 2005 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
J.G. Hayes is one of the best, if not the best, young gay American fiction writers. I was totally knocked out by his first book, This Thing Called Courage---each story was sexier and more revelatory than the one preceeding it. Hayes has his hand on the pulse of the young, confused, uneducated American teenager. It is at that age that sexual confusion is most harrowing. Hayes knows this and writes about it from the heart.
Every story in this collection is as good as those in This Thing Called Courage. You're Always Happy When You're Rich is the stunner here for me. I turned each page of this story with breathless eagerness.
I'm in awe of the talent of this writer. You will be too. Buy this book now!
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