Synopsis:
While visiting the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, ex-cop Frank Branco witnesses the death of a former major league player, and his detecting instincts come on strong. He looks into the recent past of the dead man and finds a life lived at the edges. Once a promising rookie, Herb Frawley saw his career take a nosedive after several seasons. Why the abrupt decline? Is it somehow linked to Frawley's death?
Hired by Frawley's ex-wife, Branco begins a case that takes him from the Manhattan offices of a big-time sports agent, through the seedy world of Coney Island grifters, to a religious colony on the Jersey Shore. The focus of his investigation becomes an old ballpark vendor whom Branco locates in a Florida rest home. The old man's chaotic memories of a bygone era of baseball land Branco in a thirty-year-old mystery involving pornography, betrayal, and murder.
But is he up to solving it? He left the cops after being shot in the line of duty, but his wound goes far deeper than the pain it still causes him, and he must continually probe at the underlying failure it implies. Now time has come full circle, and Branco uncovers a devastating secret that puts him into a ninth-inning situation from which there may be no escape.
Review:
Baseball and mystery -- what a combination! If it works, that is. Others have tried without much success, but novelist Daniels and baseball broadcaster Carpenter pull off the double play with style and substance. Herb Frawley had a short but memorable career with the Giants before he stumbled into obscurity. When he dies in a flaming car crash in Cooperstown, ex-cop Frank Branco smells something suspicious and starts an investigation that takes him to an art gallery in Provincetown, a religious community in New Jersey and a dangerous lake near Sarasota. Each setting adds a part to the puzzle of Frawley's decline and fall.
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