Magic Time

Magic Time

by W. P. Kinsella
Magic Time

Magic Time

by W. P. Kinsella

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Overview

A “warmhearted” small-town novel, full of “endearing characters and baseball lore,” by the author of Shoeless Joe (Publishers Weekly).
 
Mike Houle is a college all-star second baseman in his junior year when he turns down a fourth-round draft pick offer from the Montreal Expos. He’ll finish his business degree and try his luck again next year.
 
But Mike’s final year in college sees his performance take a downward slide, and his big league dreams are going the way of his stats. When Mike’s agent offers him a chance to play in the Cornbelt League in Iowa, Mike can’t refuse. He can even handle the isolation of living in Grand Mound once he learns he’s a cinch to start at second base.
 
Sure enough, Mike’s never played better than on the Grand Mound Greenshirts, and he even begins to fall for the town’s charms—including a certain Tracy Ellen Powell. That is, until he starts to suspect that when the good citizens of Grand Mound lure young men into their town, they have more on their minds than just baseball . . .
 
“Kinsella hits another home run.” —The Edmonton Journal
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780795350986
Publisher: RosettaBooks
Publication date: 02/12/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 196
File size: 275 KB

About the Author

About The Author

W.P. (Bill) Kinsella is the author of some 24 books and more than 200 stories. He is best known for his baseball fiction: The Thrill of the Grass; Go the Distance; The Iowa Baseball Confederacy; The Dixon Cornbelt League; Box Socials; and Shoeless Joe, his multi-award-winning novel that became the classic movie Field of Dreams, nominated for three Academy Awards, including Best Picture.

Kinsella's other books include Dance Me Outside (also made into a feature film); Scars; Born Indian; The Moccasin Telegraph; The Fencepost Chronicles; The Miss Hobbema Pageant; and Red Wolf, Red Wolf, from which the story "Lieberman in Love" was adapted for the screen and went  on to win an Academy Award for Best Short Feature. His most recent novel, If Wishes Were Horses, has been optioned by Fox 2000.

Magic Time has been optioned by the producers of The Natural.

Date of Birth:

May 25, 1935

Date of Death:

September 16, 2016

Place of Birth:

Edmonton, Alberta

Education:

University of Victoria

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Judging Distances

ONE

My father is a remarkable guy. The older I get the more remarkable I find him. He does not look the way most people would imagine a gentle, self-sacrificing father should look. Dad is a large, lumpy-looking man with coarse hair down his arms and across the backs of his hands. His black hair is receding from his wide forehead, and he suffers from perpetual five o'clock shadow. His huge hands are grease-stained and scarred, his brown eyes large and sad, but they sparkle like polished oak when he smiles, a dimple breaking at the right corner of his mouth.

"In baseball you make the same play thousands, even hundreds of thousands of times, Mike — though, like snowflakes, each one is unique. But it's patience and persistence that carry you through. The same patience and persistence won over your mom.

"You must have wondered how an old warthog like me managed to marry such a beautiful girl. When I was young I wasn't handsome, I wasn't rich, I wasn't an athlete, and I wasn't a hoodlum, so if I was gonna convince the girl I'd been in love with since fifth grade to marry me I was gonna have to do it on my own. Gracie only lived a few blocks away and we'd been in the same school all our lives. She considered me a friend, someone who'd always been there — like one of the old buildings downtown.

"Final year of high school, I was already working weekends at the box factory, and your mom worked a four-hour evening shift at the old Woolworth's. Her dad had been injured in a car accident and out of work for months. She was dating a guy named Karl, who was handsome, a fullback on the football team, and had a recklessness about him that caused girls to turn and stare when he walked down the street.

"The one bad thing I knew about Karl was that he was never on time, and for me that was like a pitcher knowing that a batter swings at the curve in the dirt. I showed up at Woolworth's at closing time, and stopped to chat with Gracie as she waited. I said I was on my way home from the box factory, but actually I watched the clock like a hawk and scooted out of the house in time to arrive just as Woolworth's was closing.

"Sometimes Karl was really late, and Gracie would get cold or tired, or both. I never said anything against the guy. I'd run across the street and get us coffee from the all-night diner, and remember to put one sugar and one and a half creams in hers, and I'd try to have a new silly joke to tell her. (Slug jokes were big then. What slug sees out the old year? Father Slime. What's a slug's favorite song? 'As Slime Goes By.')

"I can't tell you how happy I was the night when, after more than a half-hour wait, Gracie said, 'To hell with him. Walk me home, Gil.'

"The next couple of nights he was on time, but it didn't last. This went on for months. One night I got to the store early, and bought a timing chain, car polish, and a fancy gearshift knob for an old car I was trying to get running. When Gracie came out I showed her my purchases and said, 'You know, after you marry me we're gonna have the best maintained car in the neighborhood.' Gracie laughed her merry laugh, but the glance she gave me said it all. Not a month later she came out of the store and said, 'Karl and I aren't going together any more.' By that time I was finished school. A year later we were married.

"You know what I used to like best? After Karl showed up, whether Gracie was walking away with him, or whether she was getting into his old man's car, she always turned and waved to me, and gave me a big smile."

Dad would stop, sometimes there'd be a tear in his eye.

"I miss your mom more than anybody could ever know."

The nail and a half-inch of Dad's right middle finger predeceased him many years ago, slashed off by a saw at the lumberyard where he's been employed all his adult life, working his way up from stacking lumber to feeder in the sawmill to servicing the equipment, to full- fledged maintenance mechanic.

I was in first grade the day Dad lost the tip of his finger. I came home after school to find Dad in the living room rather than Mrs. Schell, who babysat my kid brother Byron and me while Dad was at work. He was sitting in his favorite chair, a leg slung over one arm of it, watching a game show on television, drinking a Tab.

"What are you doing home?" I asked.

"Had a little accident, Mike," Dad said, turning toward me, holding up his hand so I could see his middle finger bandaged in a halo of white gauze, like snow in a coal bin in contrast to the rest of his hairy, grease-stained fingers.

"Had a little run-in with a saw I was repairing. Forgot to unplug it." And he grinned, his face emitting light. "As you can see, I came out on the short end of the run-in, in more ways than one."

As I came closer I saw that there was a bright red spot, like the center of a Japanese flag, on the white gauze at the end of the damaged finger. My stomach lurched like it did when Dad and I went over the top on the carnival ferris wheel. I climbed into his lap and burrowed, trembling, into his warmth, soaking up the comfortable odors of grease, tangy sawdust, and Dad's sweat.

'What's the matter, son?"

"You're not gonna die, are you?"

"Of course not. It takes more than a saw to do in an old warhorse like me. Doc says I'll be back to work in a week. In the meantime, the Cubs are in town, so I'll pick up tickets for you and me. Maybe we'll even take Byron to the Sunday afternoon game, though you have to take your turn ferrying him to the bathroom." Byron was in play school at the time.

I hugged Dad as hard as I could, burying my face in the comfort of his plaid flannel shirt, and held on until my arms hurt.

"You don't have to worry, Mike. Your dad's never gonna leave you." And he rocked me in his arms.

I pulled myself up and kissed his blue-whiskered cheek. Dad always knew the right thing to say. Neither of us mentioned Mom, but we both knew what caused me to get all scared and shaky.

Though I claim to remember my mom, who died when I was four, I think what I remember are Dad's stories of her. What I remember is sitting on Dad's lap, him holding their wedding picture, an eight-by-ten that still sits on his bedside table, Mom younger than I am now, and beautiful, and Dad telling me about how they began dating, and how thrilled he was when Mom said she'd marry him.

"Look at that, Mike, I look like a gorilla in a tuxedo. What do you suppose your mom ever saw in me?"

Or else he'd hold the family portrait one of those door-to-door photographers took not long after Byron was born. I'm sitting on Dad's knee, dressed in yellow shorts, with a white shirt and yellow bow tie, while Mom is holding Byron wrapped in a blue blanket, all that's visible of him a little pink circle of face. Dad would talk about the day the portrait was taken, how I was so hyper that, though you can't see it in the picture, he had a firm grip on the back of my shorts in order to keep me from leaping off his knee.

"Your mom had just washed your face for the third time since the photographer got there. She wiped it again, tossed the washcloth over her shoulder in the general direction of the kitchen, and said to the photographer, who looked like he'd slept in his car with a bottle of cheap wine, 'Shoot us quick before any more dirt gravitates to that boy's face!'"

Other times we'd look at dog-eared photographs from the chocolate box of photos that always sat on the mantel of the pretend fireplace in the living room. There were pictures of Mom next to a half-washed car; in jeans, shirttails flapping, as she ran laughing from a spray of water. Dad said that photo was taken before they were married, and he was on the other end of the hose. There was a color Polaroid of Mom in a yellow waitress uniform, her name, Gracie, in brown lettering above her pocket, her red hair spilling over her shoulders, smiling like she'd just received a ten-dollar tip. Her hair was so pretty in that photograph, and the photo was so clear I could see the freckles on her cheeks and the back of the hand that's visible.

"You boys got the best of both of us," Dad would say, holding up a picture of Mom smiling over a birthday cake flaming with twenty-three candles, Dad behind her chair, crouched in order to get into the picture, grinning like a fool, his fingers in a V above Mom's head, making her look like she has rabbit ears.

"You're both built strong like me, with big bones, but you're good lookin' like your mom."

Byron is stocky, but he has Mom's red hair and green eyes. I'm tall and slim like Mom, but I'm strong-boned and have huge hands like Dad. My hair is reddish-brown, and has a cowlick that refuses to submit to a comb, my eyes a greeny-hazel.

Mom's name before she married Dad was Grace Palichuk. Her grandfather had emigrated from Ukraine to work in the packing plants in Chicago. My grandfather, Dmetro Palichuk, followed in his father's footsteps at the packing plant, but chose an Irish girl to marry, Margaret Emily O'Day, with dark rose-colored hair, green eyes, and freckles.

Our family name is Houle. My father's name is Gilbert. Dad claimed the original Houle was a smuggler and privateer, a crewman on Jean Lafitte's pirate ship.

"Lafitte and his men fought for the Americans in the Battle of New Orleans and were pardoned by President Madison. I saw the pardon, or at least a copy of it, when I was a boy. That original Houle settled on Galveston Island after the Civil War, but who knows how one of his descendants got to Chicago?"

Sometimes Dad tells of a descendant of that first American Houle, a Wells Fargo driver and buffalo hunter in the Dakota Territory, who married a Black Hawk Indian woman (or Nez Percé, depending on his mood) and later became a livestock dealer before being wiped out by the great Chicago fire.

"Your great-grandfather got mistaken for Billy the Kid. This was in some wild Colorado mining town. He was a skinny little guy with a big mustache. The town folks spotted your great-grandfather riding into town, and some young bucks tried to force him into a gunfight. He moved real careful and unbuckled his guns, let them fall to the ground. 'You wouldn't shoot an unarmed man would you?'

"They didn't shoot him, but they flung him in jail and decided to have a public hanging in three days. And it would have gone ahead except the real Billy the Kid rode into town. It was said he had a look about him, a rock hardness, a death-like stare. Nobody tried to provoke him into a gunfight. He made it clear he was Billy the Kid, and dared anybody to do anything about it. He even visited your great-grandfather in jail. He laughed when he saw him. 'You look like a gunfighter Ned Buntline might have invented. You don't look nothin' like me.' Billy said.

"'Send this little cowboy on his way,' Billy told the sheriff, and the sheriff did as he was told. It's said your great-grandfather never again wore a gun on his hip, and skedaddled out of Colorado like he was being chased.

"It was one of his boys that got fleeced out of his socks in a gold- stock scam. I did see a photo of him, and he resembled your cousin Verdell in California; you know, a boy so dumb he'd sell his car for gas money."

* * *

Mom died after being hit by a car right in front of our house. We lived in this quiet, working-class suburb of Chicago, in a wartime house, one of thousands of almost identical box-like structures built right after the Second World War to house returning servicemen and their families. The house was already twenty-five years old when my parents acquired it, just a year before Mom was killed.

Schiffert Box and Lumber, where Dad worked, was an old-fashioned company that had been founded in 1890. They hadn't manufactured wooden boxes since the 1960s, but retained that part of the name. Dad got paid every Friday, in cash. It's only within the last five years that Schiffert has paid by check and at two-week intervals.

Every Saturday morning Mom would do the weekly grocery shopping. On Friday evenings she would circle the loss leaders in each grocery ad or flyer, then we'd tour the supermarkets buying only the items on sale.

I was holding Byron's hand, walking from the house, across the lawn, which Dad kept smooth as a golf green, toward our Ford Maverick, parked at the curb. The car was a shade of gold that Dad laughingly said the used-car salesman had referred to as Freudian Gilt.

The day was hot and breezy, with a few sheep-sized white clouds floating across the sky. Mom was wearing a white dress with red anchors patterned on it, white shoes, and a wide-brimmed straw hat with a red ribbon around the crown. Her family had been over for dinner the previous Sunday and Mom had borrowed some folding chairs from Grandma Palichuk, which we were going to return after shopping.

Mom had the trunk of the car open, had one chair inside and was reaching for a second when a gust of wind whipped her hat off. The hat hit the pavement beside the car, turned on edge, and rolled like a plate into the street. Mom moved instinctively to chase it.

She only took about three steps, the street was narrow and three steps was far enough for her to move right into the path of an oncoming car, driven by George Franklin, who lived only a block down the street. George Franklin didn't even have time to apply the brakes. The car hit Mom, carried her about twenty feet down the street and deposited her on the pavement. I can still hear the sound of her head hitting the street. She died instantly, the doctor who arrived with the ambulance said.

Dad was mowing the back yard with a gas lawnmower, so he didn't know anything unusual was going on. Someone had to go to the back yard and get him. The neighbors didn't think to keep Byron and me away from the scene. I was sobbing because I knew what had happened was not play. Byron and I looked down at Mom, and Byron said, "Mama sleeping?" and through my tears I said, "Yes, Mama's sleeping."

Then a woman in a swirling gray housedress took us each by the hand and hurried us into her house. Even though the doctor pronounced Mom dead at the scene, Dad insisted on riding with the ambulance to the hospital.

Mr. Franklin was not at fault. He wasn't speeding. He was in the correct lane. His car was in good mechanical condition. Between the accident and the funeral, Dad walked us down the block to Mr. Franklin's house. I held onto his right hand, and he carried Byron in the crook of his left arm.

Mr. Franklin was a tall, gaunt man with a hairline that went back like a horseshoe, a crooked nose, and sad blue eyes that protruded slightly.

"I just want you to know I realize what happened was an accident," Dad said to him. "There was nothing you could do. Gracie should have looked before she ran into the street after her hat. You were just in the wrong place at the wrong time. It could have happened to anyone." Dad held out his hand to Mr. Franklin.

Mr. Franklin's hand was trembling violently as he reached to shake my dad's extended hand. He spoke very softly. He said he hadn't slept since the accident, didn't know if he'd ever sleep again.

"Don't be hard on yourself," Dad said. "It could have been your wife. It could have been me driving home from the hardware store on a Saturday morning."

There was no way Dad could have done more — I don't know if I could be so generous in similar circumstances — but what he did wasn't enough. Mr. Franklin had a nervous breakdown, lost his job as an accountant with the Grain Exchange. He stopped driving. His family left him. He stayed home alone and drank all day. On the first anniversary of my mother's death Mr. Franklin put a gun to his head and ended his pain.

Dad had a married sister in Kansas City; my mother had one in Chicago and one in Milwaukee; and Grandma Palichuk lived only a ten-minute drive from us. Each of them volunteered to take Byron and me, to care for us and to raise us as their own.

And some good cases were made, the best by my dad's sister in Kansas City, my Aunt Noreen, who was married to a lawyer, lived in a five-bedroom house with a swimming pool, had only one child, a girl, Phoebe, and was desperate for a son, but unable to bear any more children. No one considered for a moment that Dad might want to raise his own sons.

But my dad, big awkward rough diamond that he was, refused all their offers, even ignored Aunt Noreen, who, after being turned down threatened to sue for custody on the grounds that Dad lacked the ability to care for us properly It was about ten years before Dad forgave his sister for that threat. He intended to look after us himself, he said. And when Dad says something, he means it.

It wasn't easy. There were housekeepers, play schools, and day-care centers. There were babysitters who did exactly that — sat — often having friends over who ate everything not locked up. There were housekeepers who drank, who entertained boyfriends, who quit on a moment's notice, stealing whatever they were able to carry.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Magic Time"
by .
Copyright © 2013 W.P. Kinsella.
Excerpted by permission of RosettaBooks.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Copyright,
Prologue,
Chapter 1: Judging Distances,
Chapter 2: One Road Runs Straight,
Chapter 3: Fred Noonan's Town,
Chapter 4: Barry McMartin,
Chapter 5: Safe at Home,
Chapter 6: Magic Time,
About the Author,

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