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For Love of the Game

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This article is about the novel by Michael Shaara. For the movie based on this novel, see For Love of the Game (film).
<tr><th>Country</th><td>United States</td></tr><tr><th>Language</th><td>English</td></tr><tr><th>Genre(s)</th><td>Fiction</td></tr> <tr><th>Media Type</th><td>Print (Hardcover)</td></tr><tr><th>Pages</th><td>152 p. (hardcover edition)</td></tr><tr><th>ISBN</th><td>ISBN 0-88184-695-3 (hardcover edition)</td></tr>
For Love of the Game
AuthorMichael Shaara
PublisherCarroll & Graf Publishers
Released1991 (1st edition)

For Love of the Game is a novel by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Michael Shaara, published posthumously in 1991. The book tells the story of fictional baseball great Billy Chapel, thirty-seven years old and nearing the end of his career.

With just two more games before the World Series, and Chapel's team, the Hawks, about to play against the New York Yankees, Chapel receives news from a sports reporter that the new owners of the team, the sons of the Old Man who had signed him years earlier, are preparing to trade him. Just the night before, his girlfriend Carol did not show up at his hotel room, and Chapel reaches the conclusion that it is time to move on and finally make the transition from boyhood to manhood. That morning, he makes the decision that this will be the last game he plays.

Over half the book tells the story of that final game, with flashbacks from the pitching mound and dugout to incidents throughout Chapel's charmed life. Chapel is determined that his last game will also be his greatest, even though, with all the young new players on the Hawks, the Yankees are a far superior team. As he strikes out his opponents one after the other, he soon becomes aware of the fact that he has held the Yankees at bay thus far, not allowing one hit from the more talented Yankees team. He soon becomes determined to pitch a no-hitter. Meanwhile, he reflects on his personal life, and especially on Carol, whom he finally realizes that he loves, even though he has never actually said it. That morning Carol told him she is planning to get married, so the two key passions of his life, Carol and baseball, are about to vanish forever.

As the game proceeds, Chapel feels the sharp pain in his arm that comes with age. Nevertheless, he refuses to give up the pitching mound, and chooses instead to divert his attention by delving deeper into his life and his relationship. At the end of the game, he has pitched a perfect game and retires from baseball with a new dignity. After the celebrations, he calls Carol one last time to tell her he loves her and to try and rebuild their relationship. With baseball behind him, he has grown from a boy who has led a charmed life into manhood.

This short book was discovered after Shaara's death, and published by his son, author Jeffrey Shaara. The book was made into a movie by Sam Raimi.

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