Survival Seeds

Friday, April 16, 2010

Playing for Pizza by John Grisham

Picture from Amazon.com
I like to read John Grisham was the original reason I picked this book up. but in the end I fell in love with the book. I connected with the characters (even though I don't understand a lot about football!) and loved the story line that Grisham wove. I enjoyed the book and the ending was good. It wrapped up loose ends. I was listening to this book when I was driving back and forth to school and the only bad thing about this book was that I craved pasta!!! I am a pasta fanatic and I really wanted it after listening to the meals in Italy that they were eating. This is a must read, even if you don't understand football. The focus is not so much on football as it is on Rick and his inward fight to decide what is truly important in life.
From Publishers Weekly
Third-string Cleveland Browns quarterback Rick Dockery becomes the greatest goat ever by throwing three interceptions in the closing minutes of the AFC championship game. Fleeing vengeful fans, he finds refuge in the grungiest corner of professional football, the Italian National Football League as quarterback of the inept but full-of-heart Parma Panthers. What ensues is a winsome football fable, replete with team bonding and character-building as the underdog Panthers challenge the powerhouse Bergamo Lions for a shot at the Italian Superbowl. The book is also the author's love letter to Italy. Rick is first baffled and then enchanted by all things Italian-tiny cars! opera! benign corruption!-and through him Grisham (The Firm) instructs his readership in the art of gracious living, featuring sumptuous four-hour, umpteen-course meals. The writing sometimes lapses into travel-guide ("most Italian cities are sort of configured around a central square, called a piazza") and food porn ("[the veal cutlets are beaten with a small bat, then dipped in eggs, fried in a skillet, and then baked in the oven with a mix of parmigiano cheese and stock until the cheese melts"), but it's invigorated by appealing characters and lively play-by-play. The result is a charming fish-out-of-water story.
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