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The story of the 69-year-old author of this
astonishing first fiction collection is a salutary one; he wrote between
gigs tending boxers in their corners as a "cut man" (who stanches the
blood flow and allows fights to continue), finally got a story published
by a small literary magazine, was spotted by a keen-eyed agent and
achieved book publication. It's amazing it took so long, because
Irish-born Toole, now living and working in Los Angeles, is a natural. His
knowledge of the bizarre world of professional boxing is encyclopedic and
utterly persuasive, his prose is as tight as a well-laced pair of gloves
and his protagonists, in this collection of five stories and a novella,
are mythically heroic (and occasionally evil) but convincing archetypes.
"The Money Look" is an exquisite turning-the-tables yarn at the expense of
a cynical crook of a fighter; "Black Jew" is a telling tale of humble
ambition woven with the lure of big money. A lacerating account of a
courageous, deeply endearing hillbilly woman fighter and her sad fate,
"Million $$$ Baby," is arguably the best story in the book. "Fightin' in
Philly" is an almost equally moving tale of the toll the ambition to be a
title fighter takes on a man. Another innocent torn up by the fight game
is portrayed in "Frozen Water." Only the title novella, "Rope Burns,"
falls somewhat behind the sterling standard set by the other stories, with
their firm authority and dead-on dialogue. It is more ambitious, even
operatic, in its pitting of an almost superhumanly noble Olympic contender
against a low-life East Los Angeles gang member at the time of the Rodney
King riots. Like all of Toole's stories, it's breathlessly readable, even
though the climactic bloodshed feels forced, as if Toole's cool narrative
style cannot bear so much melodramatic freight. But make no mistake, the
man is a heavyweight fiction contender. Agent, Nat Sobel. 6-city author
tour. (Sept.)
Copyright © 1997-2005
Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights
reserved.
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