Bleachers
Bleachers book cover

Bleachers

Mass Market Paperback – June 22, 2004

Price
$10.00
Publisher
Dell
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0440242000
Dimensions
4.16 x 0.63 x 6.87 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

“As taut and twisting as a well-thrown spiral.” —People “A sure-footed storyteller with an undeniable mastery of plotting, pacing, and tone.”— The New York Times Book Review “[Grisham] makes this football game so real that the reader can almost see and hear it.”— The New York Times “Some of the best writing from Grisham . . . [He] makes Bleachers sing.” —Los Angeles Times From the Inside Flap High school all-American Neely Crenshaw was probably the best quarterback ever to play for the legendary Messina Spartans. Fifteen years have gone by since those glory days, and Neely has come home to Messina to bury Coach Eddie Rake, the man who molded the Spartans into an unbeatable football dynasty.Now, as Coach Rake?s ?boys? sit in the bleachers waiting for the dimming field lights to signal his passing, they replay the old games, relive the old glories, and try to decide once and for all whether they love Eddie Rake ? or hate him. For Neely Crenshaw, a man who must finally forgive his coach ?-- and himself ? before he can get on with his life, the stakes are especially high. Since first publishing A Time to Kill in 1988, Grisham has written one novel a year (his other books are The Firm, The Pelican Brief, The Client, The Chamber, The Rainmaker, The Runaway Jury, The Partner, The Street Lawyer, The Testament, The Brethren, A Painted House, Skipping Christmas, The Summons, The King of Torts, Bleachers, The Last Juror, and The Broker ) and all of them have become international bestsellers. The Innocent Man (October 2006) marks his first foray into non-fiction.Grisham lives with his wife Renee and their two children Ty and Shea. The family splits their time between their Victorian home on a farm in Mississippi and a plantation near Charlottesville, VA. From the Trade Paperback edition. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. TuesdayThe road to Rake Field ran beside the school, past the old band hall and the tennis courts, through a tunnel of two perfect rows of red and yellow maples planted and paid for by the boosters, then over a small hill to a lower area covered with enough asphalt for a thousand cars. The road stopped in front of an immense gate of brick and wrought iron that announced the presence of Rake Field, and beyond the gate was a chain-link fence that encircled the hallowed ground. On Friday nights, the entire town of Messina waited for the gate to open, then rushed to the bleachers where seats were claimed and nervous pregame rituals were followed. The black, paved pasture around Rake Field would overflow long before the opening kickoff, sending the out-of-town traffic into the dirt roads and alleys and remote parking zones behind the school's cafeteria and its baseball field. Opposing fans had a rough time in Messina, but not nearly as rough as the opposing teams. Driving slowly along the road to Rake Field was Neely Crenshaw, slowly because he had not been back in many years, slowly because when he saw the lights of the field the memories came roaring back, as he knew they would. He rolled through the red and yellow maples, bright in their autumn foliage. Their trunks had been a foot thick in Neely's glory days, and now their branches touched above him and their leaves dropped like snow and covered the road to Rake Field. It was late in the afternoon, in October, and a soft wind from the north chilled the air. He stopped his car near the gate and stared at the field. All movements were slow now, all thoughts weighted heavily with sounds and images of another life. When he played the field had no name; none was needed. Every person in Messina knew it simply as The Field. "The boys are on The Field early this morning," they would say at the cafés downtown. "What time are we cleaning up The Field?" they would ask at the Rotary Club. "Rake says we need new visitors' bleachers at The Field," they would say at the boosters' meeting. "Rake's got 'em on The Field late tonight," they would say at the beer joints north of town. No piece of ground in Messina was more revered than The Field. Not even the cemetery. After Rake left they named it after him. Neely was gone by then, of course, long gone with no plans to return. Why he was returning now wasn't completely clear, but deep in his soul he'd always known this day would come, the day somewhere out there in the future when he was called back. He'd always known that Rake would eventually die, and of course there would be a funeral with hundreds of former players packed around the casket, all wearing their Spartan green, all mourning the loss of a legend they loved and hated. But he'd told himself many times that he would never return to The Field as long as Rake was alive. In the distance, behind the visitors' stands, were the two practice fields, one with lights. No other school in the state had such a luxury, but then no other town worshiped its football as thoroughly and collectively as Messina. Neely could hear a coach's whistle and the thump and grunts of bodies hitting each other as the latest Spartan team got ready for Friday night. He walked through the gate and across the track, painted dark green of course. The end zone grass was manicured and suitable for putting, but there were a few wild sprigs inching up the goalpost. And there was a patch or two of weeds in one corner, and now that he'd noticed Neely looked even closer and saw untrimmed growth along the edge of the track. In the glory days dozens of volunteers gathered every Thursday afternoon and combed The Field with gardening shears, snipping out every wayward blade of grass. The glory days were gone. They left with Rake. Now Messina football was played by mortals, and the town had lost its swagger. Coach Rake had once cursed loudly at a well-dressed gentleman who committed the sin of stepping onto the sacred Bermuda grass of The Field. The gentleman backtracked quickly, then walked around the sideline, and when he drew closer Rake realized he had just cursed the Mayor of Messina. The Mayor was offended. Rake didn't care. No one walked on his field. The Mayor, unaccustomed to being cursed, set in motion an ill-fated effort to fire Rake, who shrugged it off. The locals defeated the Mayor four to one as soon as his name appeared on the next ballot. In those days, Eddie Rake had more political clout in Messina than all the politicians combined, and he thought nothing of it. Neely stuck to the sideline and slowly made his way toward the home stands, then he stopped cold and took a deep breath as the pregame jitters hit him hard. The roar of a long-ago crowd came back, a crowd packed tightly together up there, in the bleachers, with the band in the center of things blaring away with its endless renditions of the Spartan fight song. And on the sideline just a few feet away, he could see number 19 nervously warming up as the mob worshiped him. Number 19 was a high school all-American, a highly recruited quarterback with a golden arm, fast feet, plenty of size, maybe the greatest Messina ever produced. Number 19 was Neely Crenshaw in another life. He walked a few steps along the sideline, stopped at the fifty where Rake had coached hundreds of games, and looked again at the silent bleachers where ten thousand people once gathered on Friday nights to pour their emotions upon a high school football team. The crowds were half that now, he'd heard. Fifteen years had passed since number 19 had thrilled so many. Fifteen years since Neely had played on the sacred turf. How many times had he promised himself he would never do what he was now doing? How many times had he sworn he would never come back? On a practice field in the distance a coach blew a whistle and someone was yelling, but Neely barely heard it. Instead he was hearing the drum corps of the band, and the raspy, unforgettable voice of Mr. Bo Michael on the public address, and the deafening sound of the bleachers rattling as the fans jumped up and down. And he heard Rake bark and growl, though his coach seldom lost his cool in the heat of battle. The cheerleaders were over there--bouncing, chanting, short skirts, tights, tanned and firm legs. Neely had his pick back then. His parents sat on the forty, eight rows down from the press box. He waved at his mother before every kickoff. She spent most of the game in prayer, certain he would break his neck. The college recruiters got passes to a row of chair-backed seats on the fifty, prime seating. Someone counted thirty-eight scouts for the Garnet Central game, all there to watch number 19. Over a hundred colleges wrote letters; his father still kept them. Thirty-one offered full scholarships. When Neely signed with Tech, there was a press conference and headlines. Ten thousand seats up in the bleachers, for a town with a population of eight thousand. The math had never worked. But they piled in from the county, from out in the sticks where there was nothing else to do on Friday night. They got their paychecks and bought their beer, and they came to town, to The Field where they clustered in one raucous pack at the north end of the stands and made more noise than the students, the band, and the townsfolk combined. When he was a boy, his father had kept him away from the north end. "Those county people" down there were drinking and sometimes fighting and they yelled foul language at the officials. A few years later, number 19 adored the racket made by those county people, and they certainly adored him. The bleachers were silent now, waiting. He moved slowly down the sideline, hands stuck deep in his pockets, a forgotten hero whose star had faded so quickly. The Messina quarterback for three seasons. Over a hundred touchdowns. He'd never lost on this field. The games came back to him, though he tried to block them out. Those days were gone, he told himself for the hundredth time. Long gone. In the south end zone the boosters had erected a giant scoreboard, and mounted around it on large white placards with bold green lettering was the history of Messina football. And thus the history of the town. Undefeated seasons in 1960 and 1961, when Rake was not yet thirty years old. Then in 1964 The Streak began, with perfect seasons for the rest of that decade and into the next. A month after Neely was born in 1970, Messina lost to South Wayne in the state championship, and The Streak was over. Eighty-four wins in a row, a national record at that time, and Eddie Rake was a legend at the age of thirty-nine. Neely's father had told him of the unspeakable gloom that engulfed the town in the days after that loss. As if eighty-four straight victories were not enough. It was a miserable winter, but Messina endured. Next season, Rake's boys went 13-0 and slaughtered South Wayne for the state title. Other state championships followed, in '74, '75, and '79. Then the drought. From 1980 until 1987, Neely's senior year, Messina went undefeated each season, easily won its conference and playoffs, only to lose in the state finals. There was discontent in Messina. The locals in the coffee shops were not happy. The old-timers longed for the days of The Streak. Some school in California won ninety in a row and the entire town of Messina was offended. To the left of the scoreboard, on green placards with white lettering, were the tributes to the greatest of all Messina heroes. Seven numbers had been retired, with Neely's 19 being the last. Next to it was number 56, worn by Jesse Trapp, a linebacker who played briefly at Miami then went to prison. In 1974, Rake had retired number 81, worn by Roman Armstead, the only Messina Spartan to play in the NFL. Beyond the south end zone was a field house that any small college would envy. It had a weight room and lockers and a visitors' dressing roo... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • High school all-American Neely Crenshaw was probably the best quarterback ever to play for the legendary Messina Spartans. Fifteen years have gone by since those glory days, and Neely has come home to Messina to bury Coach Eddie Rake, the man who molded the Spartans into an unbeatable football dynasty.Now, as Coach Rake’s “boys” sit in the bleachers waiting for the dimming field lights to signal his passing, they replay the old games, relive the old glories, and try to decide once and for all whether they love Eddie Rake – or hate him. For Neely Crenshaw, a man who must finally forgive his coach –-- and himself – before he can get on with his life, the stakes are especially high.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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(1.2K)
★★★★
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(986)
★★★
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(592)
★★
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

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"Bleachers" is little better than second-string melodrama

Despondent and adrift, former high-school All-American football star Neely Crenshaw returns to his childhood home to grieve -- for his terminally ill coach, lost dreams and an adult life of frustration, futility and fear. It's hard not to feel for Neely, and John Grisham trots out every convention to enlist the reader in the star's legion of fans. "Bleachers" is an effective, sensitive and tidy portrait of the impact of high-school football on the men who played the game and an examination of the enduring legacy of a coach who inspired loathing and love in his players. The novel is also melodramatic, predictable and manipulative, and instead of a being a genuinely moving tribute to a coach's undying presence, "Bleachers" meanders in familiar territory, forfeiting integrity for clichés.

Before there was Neely Crenshaw, there was Chip Hilton, whose wholesome exploits on the athletic field made him an icon for the Baby Boomer generation. Hilton's coach was a genuine role model, never compromising his athletes' need for authentic validation to the altar of victory. In turn, Hilton's inevitable victories comforted readers who needed assurance that right prevails, honor is worth the effort and adult role models exist in America's high schools.

Crenshaw's Coach Rake is a complicated but flawed man, driven to win, devoted to excellence, and inflexible in his insistence on practice, execution and fearless performance. His former players never seem to grow up, suspended in memory, frozen on the picture-perfect gridiron of Messina High School. As stereotyped as Chip Hilton was in the 1960s, Neely Crenshaw is even less complicated. His angst is tiresome, his hidden secrets obvious. Even before Coach Rake dies, we know his players will revisit the past, confront their ghosts and come out of the valley of death ennobled.

What makes this pat formula work is Grisham's gift with dialogue. Neely confronts teammates (one a model of middle-class stability, one an inmate, one gay) as well as his spurned former girl-friend with a combination of stoic pain and courageous determination. Through this gentle odyssey, we watch a grown man truly become a functional adult. But the observations require us to wade through saccharine vignettes, absolutely contrived conversations and stereotyped characters.

In the most painful sense, Grisham is preaching to the choir. Those who are less than enthralled with football or who are aware of its limits will find "Bleachers" effective propaganda but inadequate literature. Those who have played the game, who constantly relive their pasts and faithfully advocate the sport as the salvation of our society will sleep with the novel under their pillows.
13 people found this helpful
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Lame!

I can't even believe that this is a Grisham novel. The story was soo lame. Could've been written by an 8th grader. Totally "contrived", ridiculously stereotypical characters. As mentioned by other reviewers, the story went nowhere. Quick read, thankful that I didn't waste more time on this. Other reviews were quite critical as well, but gave it 3 or 4 stars....don't know why?? This novel is pure fluff.
7 people found this helpful
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And I thought "Varsity Blues" was ridiculous...

Grisham hacks out every small town stereotype in this novel. I read this after having it recommended to me by several coaches who work in my school. Typical. This book is written for those who read a book maybe once a year. The dialogue is ridiculous, the story line trite, and the characters are so stereotypical, it's insulting.

Save yourself the trouble!
6 people found this helpful
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Disappointed

This book was absolutely PAINFUL to get through - no plot, no interesting characters, just no message period. Grisham should stick with books in the legal genre.
6 people found this helpful
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A story with real Southern charm

John Grisham is really letting his Mississippi roots show with this one. Take a small town. Needless to say, football is king. This is the case all over the Deep South. Not the pro variety mind you, but the college and high school kind. Take a colorful coach who has built a dynasty. Because of it, he is the most important man in town. The players love him and hate him at the same time. Create some lore. "The Streak", and "The Comeback" against East Pike. Bring in some colorful small town characters. An "All American", the loggers from the county, a star player succombed to drugs and in the pen. A failed love interest because the "All American" though with the wrong part of his body. Bring all of this together and you have a wonderful Southern football yarn.

This story takes place over the course of four days as Messina Spartans from different eras return to stand vigil over their dying coach. They relive old rivalries and victories. Most of all, they relive the times, good and bad, they had with their coach. They relive the miracle 1987 game, and in the process, let out a secret that had been kept for a decade.

Three former players deliver eulogies, including the player the coach had his second worst incident with in his stint as a coach.

This story brings a small town alive with what is truly important in many small towns in the South. Friday night football, the heroes, the games, the championships and the legends. This book has all of that. While this is out of Grisham's usual genre, this short story has the elements of a down home, wholesome story with a twist.
5 people found this helpful
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No conflict = not much of a story

Don't expect any of the traditional and typical suspense and excitement of Grisham's regular body of work to be represented in this novella.

I must admit, I didn't read the book -- I only listened to it on CD on a recent car trip. There's no conflict, making for a fairly pointless storyline. The protagonist doesn't grow much (if at all). While the writing DOES conjure up plenty of characters many people will know from small-town life, the dialogue Grisham puts into their mouths seems incredibly unlikely. Who really speaks in paragraphs in this sort of town, except maybe Bill Clinton? Certainly not the same ex-jocks who deliberate over a cheerleader-cum-cocktail waitress named "Screamer" (one of several painful passages). And the sole mystery (just how DID Neely break his hand?) will be quickly ferreted out by the least attentive of readers.

Concerning redeeming qualities, Grisham does round out his more important characters, for the most part. They each have a touch of good and bad, colored more grey than black or white. Also, football fans should enjoy the book, especially if the only other reading they do is the local sports page. Non-fans, on the other hand, will tire from the endless litanies of statistics and radio announcers game descriptions.

For a better sports-related choice, look up David Halberstam's THE TEAMMATES. It's better written, more engaging, and it really happened.
5 people found this helpful
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bad book. dont waste your time

Dont waste your time reading this book. It has nothing....storyline, suspense or even effort.

Waste of time and money.
4 people found this helpful
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Sadly disappointed

I have read and enjoyed most of Grisham's works over the years, but this book lacked suspense and was extremely predictable. It is a tired old story of a star athlete who has to deal with no longer being the golden child as life moves on. I kept waiting for it to become exciting, but it never did. I too skimmed whole sections (especially the painfully boring play-by-play commentary) and would not have even finished it had it not been so short. This book just couldn't bring out the excitement that is present when you attend a football game in real life. I also kept expecting some unexpected twist or turn, but it never came.

It bothered me how they glamorized criminals, and it especially bothered me how they trashed the ex-girlfriend (Screamer) who was as much of a victim of society as any one else in this story.

I was sadly disappointed in this book and would not recommend it to any Grisham fan unless perhaps the reader himself is a prior highschool football star who could relate to the story better than I could.
3 people found this helpful
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A great read

I didn't know what to expect when I started this book. A friend had recommended it. I picked up the book at eight in the evening. I didn't put it down until I was done. This is not a suspense book. But it's great literature. The story is very well written, the characters are 100% believable. I never played football in highschool, but I appreciate the conflict in the main character. This is a great story about a man coming of age, coming to terms with his failures and short comings. I thought this book was a great read and worth sharing. You don't have to like football to enjoy the characters of this book.
3 people found this helpful
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Boorrrrrriiiiinng

I'm a Grisham fan but this one caught me snoozing. The story was predictable. The characters were ones I feel like are in my hometown which made it quite sad. I kept waiting for it to get better...and it didn't. I skipped entire sections (the ones with the radio broadcast) because I was so horribly bored. I read ahead and didn't feel like I missed a thing! Ah, jocks turn into typical people. Jocks mess with girl...jocks lose girl...old-jocks don't get girl. It's all be done before...in my hometown.

I know that authors need to veer away from their typical genres; Grisham did it wonderfully with Skipping Christmas. Unfortunately, this one just wasn't reflective of his abilities to draw in the reader. I stick with his courtroom thrillers. Those take my breath away.
3 people found this helpful