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Bow's Boy

Bow's Boy
Bow's Boy
A Novel  
This edition: Trade Paperback, 368 pages
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Description

Every now and then, a small American town produces someone with such out-of-place talent that he seems to have come from a different world. In the 1960s hardscrabble town of Laroque, Wisconsin, seventeen-year-old Ginger Piper, a high school sports hero and a disarmingly poised and articulate young man, is that sort of figure. Or at least G. Bowman Epps -- a rich, lonely, middle-aged lawyer -- believes he is.

Bow is something of a town legend too: Ungainly and scarred, brilliant and stern, famous for great inherited wealth, he seems a vestige of a time gone by in a town where the legacy of past greatness -- embodied in the ornate, decaying, and defunct opera house -- casts a literal shadow. But when Bow discovers Ginger Piper, he is energized and inspired. Where others have seen merely a charming basketball star, Bow spies the seeds of something greater and the drive, intelligence, and passion to carry on Bow's legacy as a groundbreaking criminal attorney. When Bow offers the boy a summer apprenticeship in his orderly practice, it is an investment in a certain future, and the initiation of an oddly matched friendship. But when Ginger is accused of a startling crime that changes the town's perception of him, Bow is not only surprised, he's also implicated, and forced to choose between his fierce sense of logic and his admiration for the boy.

The story unfolds as the first agonizing repercussions of the Vietnam War are being felt and the American people are struggling to comprehend a new kind of war. It inspires a startling division between the generations at home, as politics and personal lives inevitably collide.

Bow's investigator, Charlie Stuart, narrates the events thirty years later, adding a perspective colored by tortured memories of his manic father and his halting pursuit of a young woman in town. Anchored by a compelling mystery, Bow's Boy is ultimately about greatness, heroism, loyalty, and justice, and the pain and solace of family.

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Chapter 1
Leif Enger author of Peace Like a River What I admire most about Bow's Boy is Richard Babcock's honest affection for his people
-- every last one of them. Here no reprobate is beyond redemption, no hero safe from failure, and the meek are startled to inherit the earth. Babcock remembers the smell of the bankrupt opera house, the irritated tug of pike on a line, and the potent small-town brew of politics and business and high school basketball. He is an effortless storyteller, and like his narrator, a lyrical archivist of Midwestern tragedy and pluck.
Joe Klein author of Primary Colors Richard Babcock has written a lovely, profoundly American novel about law and rebellion, growth and loss
-- and how the 1960s arrived in a small Wisconsin town. There are no gimmicks here. Bow's Boy has what one of its characters calls Wisconsin values: It runs straight, true, and very, very deep. There is an emotional honesty and intelligence to the characters that is at once exhilarating and sad and entirely memorable; they stay with you, haunt you, change you long after you've turned the last page.