
Shane Rawley, author of Peter Cobb: Three Strikes You’re Out, is a former major league baseball player. That’s no guarantee of writing ability, but I was delighted to discover that he tells a very good story.
His hero is Peter Cobb of Racine, Wisconsin. Pete used to be a major league ball player, and was a pretty good one. But something happened to him when he was drafted for the Vietnam War (this book is set in the 1970s). Now he’s coasting through life, drinking too much, avoiding responsibility and commitment (though he works out and boxes, which will be helpful in his immediate future). He works for a used car dealer, cleaning and delivering cars.
But there’s one thing that could persuade him to disturb his peace – a redheaded girl named Ronnie, on whom he’s had a crush since his school days. Ronnie’s father is a career criminal, and she’s happy not to have heard from him in a while. But now she gets word that he was killed in a warehouse explosion in the Southwest. She asks Pete to accompany her to Phoenix, where they meet a DEA agent who tells them her father was one of their informers. He gives them a key which her father left behind for her. That key will attract a lot of attention among the criminal element, forcing Pete to demonstrate (and discover) what he’s really capable of.
Peter Cobb: Three Strikes You’re Out takes a little time getting going – but in this case I didn’t mind. Pete interested me from the start, and I wanted to see how he fit into his world. I like burned-out characters as heroes, and Pete was intriguing and believable. The writing is not the very highest quality, and the plotting’s a little loose, but it’s pretty good. Shane Rawley is a promising novelist.
Christian faith is treated with respect, which I appreciated, though (as you’d expect) premarital sex is taken for granted. So cautions for the usual grownup stuff.
But all things considered, I highly recommend Peter Cobb: Three Strikes You’re Out.