File Size: 469
KB
Print Length:
110 pages
Simultaneous
Device Usage: Unlimited
Publisher: Fight
Card Books (August 14, 2013)
Sold by: Amazon
Digital Services, Inc.
Language:
English
ASIN: B00EKTX9MI
If the daytime
Soap Opera ever makes a comeback, Bobby Nash could give up writing thrillers,
New Pulp action adventures, science fiction and make a good living writing for
them. Before you laugh yourself into a heart attack, let me explain. Soap
Operas were excellent at making sure their characters were constantly miserable
and unhappy with their lot in life. If anybody in a Soap Opera had so much as a
minute of happiness, you knew it wasn’t going to last long.
Now, I don’t
mean to call BAREFOOT BONES a Soap Opera at all. But what I am saying is that
Bobby Nash (writing as Jack Tunney) does an outstanding job of making his hero miserable. Matter of
fact, the first half of the book the protagonist is hit with one emotional
sucker punch after another. This is a guy who’s life is so bad that it actually
gets better when he enlists to fight in the Korean War.
James Mason is a
broomstick thin kid living on the wrong side of the tracks in a small Georgia
town. He and his mama are so poor he can’t even afford shoes. That and his
painfully thin appearance earns him the nickname of “Barefoot Bones” and it’s a
name the town bullies love to yell in his ears as they’re beating the living
daylights out of him.
Things change
when James is taken under the wing of Old Man Winters who teaches him how to
box and control his temper, make it work for him in a fight. previously, James
had thought of Old Man Winters as being just the town recluse who kept to
himself. But James soon learns that there is far more to him. James and Old Man
Winters even become friends and since James is now able to successfully defend
himself against the bullies, his life starts to look a little better.
But that’s
before James experiences several devastating tragedies and is forced to go on
the run, living as best he can by stealing and begging until making his way to
Chicago. And it’s when he meets Father Tim Brophy, the Battling Priest of St.
Vincent’s Asylum For Boys that his story really gets going.
Bobby spends a
considerable amount of wordage dealing with the sad childhood of James Mason
and that might disappoint those who want to see more action in the ring. Oh,
there’s plenty of that, don’t worry that you won’t get your share of boxing
action in the ring. This is a Fight Card book after all and when it comes to
depicting fight scenes in the ring, Bobby Nash delivers the goods. But what I think
he’s going for here is telling the story of a young man whose real opponent is
the crummy life he’s been given, a life that he fights every day. Compared to
that, stepping into the ring with a flesh and blood opponent is gravy.
And to tell this
story, Bobby does it in simple, uncomplicated prose. Since BAREFOOT BONES is
told in first person, Bobby tells it in simple sentences, using simple words.
It’s a very appropriate storytelling technique as our narrator is a boy/young
man of limited education.
So should you
read BAREFOOT BONES? Sure you should. If you’ve been reading the Fight Card
series of books then you don’t have to be sold on this one. If you’ve never
read a Fight Card book, this is a good one to start with. If you’re a fan of
Bobby Nash who has read his other books then by all means read this. One of the
pleasures of reading a Fight Card book is that you get to read a story by a
writer like Bobby Nash who might never have written a boxing novel, or even
thought about writing one. It’s a win-win situation all the way around for both
the writer and the reader. He gets to stretch his creative muscles in a new
direction and we get to read the results. Enjoy.