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Featured Author -
June 2006
Robert Elias |
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Mysteries, Baseball & the American Dream
A budding criminologist working at a Catholic university in San Francisco? A graduate student increasingly disillusioned with academia and criminal justice, who rolls the dice and sacrifices everything for a shot at his boyhood dream—professional baseball? Where did all that come from?
Okay, it’s true that I teach politics and criminal law at the University of San Francisco, a Jesuit university in that great city. And yes, I’ve had second thoughts about the lofty ideals we often associate with higher education and law enforcement. And I’ll even confess that I had a fleeting brush with professional baseball. But none of those things had any influence whatsoever on my novel.
Of course, if you believe that, then I have a nice bridge--across the Golden Gate--to sell you.
All right, so we’ve all had dreams. But what if you had a dream you thought you’d left behind, but then a murder gave you a second chance to pursue it? That’s where I (and my life) leave off, and my protagonist, Debs Kafka, takes over.
For a literate and worldly Renaissance man, Kafka sure has a lot of problems. His relationship with the intoxicating Nicole Vermeer is on the skids. He’s plagued with doubt about the academic path he’s chosen, though he’s only a thesis away from his PhD in criminology. His department chair (a Catholic priest) has just been murdered. And he can’t stop thinking about baseball.
Horrified by the death of his University colleague, Debs feels ill-prepared to investigate the murder until the police arrest an innocent man. Lured into tracking the real culprit, Kafka enlists his criminal law students in the hunt. As they narrow down the suspects, Kafka’s doubts about criminal justice quickly multiply. When he finally leaves for baseball, with the murder still unsolved, Kafka soon turns frantic when he learns that the murderer is now threatening to kill his teammate, the star pitcher for the San Francisco Giants, in the final days of a tight pennant race.
Not coincidentally, those things bother me, too. What’s happened to the dream of American society? In my teaching and previous books, I’ve long pondered that question. But non-fiction social science, even when pitched towards the lay reader, has its limitations. Its findings, statistics, and analyses can’t fully illuminate the conditions faced by real people and the challenges that confront our society.
Ironically, only fiction—the unreal—can bring those experiences to life. So I wrote a mystery novel, published by Rounder Books. While the story, the characters, and the action always come first, the mystery format provided an inviting structure for examining issues I had previously explored only through non-fiction. How would fictional characters confront the social problems that troubled Kafka so much? Writing that story was exhilarating.
But how does one write, fictionally, about the American dream? Among all the possibilities, what metaphor could stand up to the plate? It was a no-brainer: the dream of baseball. Linking the novel’s numerous strands is the national pastime – its lore, its culture, and its lessons for conflict, struggle, and resolution. The late Renaissance scholar, Bart Giamatti, said that baseball, “is the last pure place where Americans can dream. This is the last great arena, the last green arena, where everybody can learn the lessons of life.” And in The Deadly Tools of Ignorance, there are some valuable lessons to be learned. And some glimmers of hope, as well.
More important, The Deadly Tools of Ignoranc follows the witty and feisty Debs Kafka through the dysfunctional halls of academia, into the scandal-ridden Catholic Church, down the dizzying streets of San Francisco, and into the locker rooms of Major League Baseball. Can he fathom the chaos of these different worlds, find the culprit, and still salvage his own aspirations and stormy romance?
Imagine “Good Will Hunting meets The Rookie on the Field of Dreams behind the Catholic Church.” Well, maybe not quite all that. But close.
Robert Elias teaches law and politics at the University of San Francisco. He’s the author and editor of six non-fiction books – most recently, Baseball and the American Dream. He lives in Mill Valley, California, and can be found at www.robelias.com. His mystery novel, The Deadly Tools of Ignorance: A Debs Kafka Mystery, is the first in a series, and is published by Rounder Books in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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