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Loading... Senior Year: A Father, A Son, and High School Baseballby Dan Shaughnessy
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0547053827, Paperback)In Senior Year, Dan Shaughnessy focuses his acclaimed sportswriting talent on his son Sam's senior year of high school, a turning point in any young life and certainly in the relationship between father and son. Sam is a natural hitter who quickly ascended the ranks of youth baseball. Now nicknamed the 3-2 Kid for his astonishing ability to hover between success and failure in everything he does, Sam is finally a senior and it is all on the line: what college to attend; how to keep his grades up and his head down until graduation; and whether his final high school baseball season will end in disappointment or triumph.All along the way, Dad is there, chronicling that universal experience of putting your child out on the field--and into the world--and hoping for the best. With gleaming insight, wicked humor, and, at times, the searching soul of an unsure father, Shaughnessy illuminates how sports connect generations and how they help us grow up--and let go. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:57 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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Dan Shaughnessy has been a lightning rod for controversy in his many years as a Boston-area sportswriter. This time, however, the best-selling author takes a break from the vitriol with “Senior Year” – an ode to his son’s final season of high school baseball.
“Sports connect generations,” notes Shaughnessy. “Parents and children don’t go to rock concerts together. They are obligated to disagree about politics, religion, fashion, food, hair, and morality. But they still gather to watch the Red Sox in the family room, even when they can’t find common ground anywhere else.”
Ironically, it is the father who always wished he could play with the big boys who finds himself as the parent of a bona fide star. Sam Shaughnessy is a power-hitting first baseman for Newton North High School who finds himself being recruited for his skills on the diamond by schools like Notre Dame and Boston College.
A feel-good story, “Senior Year” is more an elegy to the game that both father and son love, than it is a pitch-by-pitch recap. The author writes engagingly throughout keenly observes the pleasures and heartaches of parenting teens in the 21st century. At times both Shaughnessy the father and the author come off as a bit self-indulgent and the book has more than a minor tendency to ramble. Nonetheless, “Senior Year” makes for an excellent gift for fathers and sons to share. (