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Cracking Spines

There Was No Joy in Mudville -- an interview with local author Kurtis Scaletta

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There was no joy in Mudville. Of course, they had that year where their baseball team showed promise, but then in the final game of that season, the one that could have made them town heroes, Casey struck out in the bottom of the ninth. Moundville, though, was worse.

"At least those guys got to watch a baseball game," says Roy McGuire, twelve-year-old Moundville resident and would-be catcher. After twenty-two years of perpetual rain, though, every baseball diamond in this Midwestern town has been washed out. Beyond that, there are the normal problems of economic hardship, family-abandoning parents (a set including Roy's alcoholic mother), and worst of all, the nightly trauma of enduring Roy's dad's cooking, which features dishes like Spam manicotti and fish stick casserole.

Such is the world Kurtis Scaletta has created for his debut novel, Mudville (which, just to get rid of any confusion, is about Moundville). Following in the vein of Mark Harris and John Tunis, the book fits the mold of the classic baseball novel - and does the archetype justice - full of lingo and dugout drama, and some off-the-field gravitas, to boot. When the rain finally stops, Roy and his pals immediately set about forming a squad, so they can resume a two-decades-old grudge match against rival town Sinister Bend.

Secrets of the City had the chance to sit down with Scaletta (who happens to be a prolific MNSpeaker), and chat with him a bit about the book. This Saturday, Feb 28th, he'll be at the Red Balloon Bookshop at 2 pm. 891 Grand Avenue St. Paul, MN 55105 651-224-8320

SOTC: The epigraph - "A father makes all the difference" - is from Roy Hobbs in The Natural. Is it fair to assume that Roy is named after Roy Hobbs?

Scaletta: It was a little bit of an allusion to that. It's also my middle name. Both Roy and McGuire are family names, actually. Roy was my great-grandfather, and I was named after him. My mom always told me I had to keep it in the family. If I ever have a son, though, I don't think he will be named Roy. I don't really like the name. My wife doesn't like the name. So I thought I would name a character Roy.

But I do like the fact that it's Roy Hobbs' name.

SOTC: Well that kind of kills the lead-in to my next question, but I'm going to ask it anyway. In Mudville, you mention Bernard Malamud's classic baseball novel, The Natural, a couple times. Roy greatly prefers the ending of the movie to that of the book. Which ending do you like better for The Natural?

Scaletta: [Speaking directly into the tape recorder] For the people reading this interview: In the movie Roy Hobbs homers and knocks out the lights in the stadium's scoreboard. In the book he strikes out. Sorry to spoil it for you but that explains the whole conversation.

I think the movie's pretty great. I like the book, too. And they're almost the same, except for the endings. And in the movie, the ending's so huge, that it really makes it. In the movie, you need that ending, and in the book, you need that ending.

SOTC: If you take the baseball books by Malamud and Tunis and Harris, what you end up with is a lot of stories about the game, but also a lot of stories about illness, and loss, and depression. Do you think baseball fosters a sad sort of literature?

Scaletta: I think it's that baseball makes people feel nostalgic. It's got this kind of resonance with American history. But I don't think it was ever an innocent game. There was always cheating, there was always the drunks beating each other up in the stands. We may like to think that there was this simpler time in American history, and if there's a wistfulness about it lately, I think it's just that we associate it with the past, and a time when we like to imagine that America was better.

SOTC: Do baseball and baseball literature go hand-in-hand?

Scaletta: Absolutely. I'm a bigger baseball fan because of the books. I was a reader before I was a baseball fan, I think. It became my favorite sport because of the sort of metaphorical language of baseball. There's all this great slang. This is a 'can of corn,' and these are 'the tools of ignorance.' And that slang resonates throughout American literature.

SOTC: Did you know Mudville would be a children's book from the start?

Scaletta: Yeah. I always liked reading as a kid, and I've always enjoyed children's books. Before I wrote this, I'd decided that it was what I was going to do.

SOTC: Do you think twenty years down the road, when people are writing baseball books for young adults, they'll include the whole steroid mess?

Scaletta: I'm sure there are sports authors that already write about steroid use.

SOTC: Meanwhile, Moundville has its own problems. There's the alcoholic mother, and the jailbird father, the slumping economy, Katrina-

Scaletta: Not Katrina - it was Grand Forks, actually. I lived in Grand Forks for eleven years. And so when I talk about the town being destroyed by a flood, it came from my memories of what happened in Grand Forks. We saw all that footage. Katrina came along after I'd written the fourth draft of this book.

But yeah, you know - I basically thought of it as a humor book the whole time. But I have a guy, the pitcher Sturgis Nye, who's been in a terrible car accident and who's disfigured. And I have alcoholic parents. And a guy in jail. I don't know. I wasn't trying to be downbeat. It just came out that way.

So much of it, though, was around this pitcher, Sturgis, who's incredibly talented but kind of troubled. I thought to make the kid troubled I had to give him a pretty dark past.

SOTC: I like that even after it stops raining, it rains about five more times.

Scaletta: It occurred to me that I had to have it rain again, because it does rain in life. Without it, everything would die. So I was just thinking about it being realistic. But I do like that first time it rains again, when everyone's worried because they don't know if it'll stop.

I have a lot of rain in my writing, anyway. After writing this one, I realized in the other stories I've published, there's always rain in them. I don't know - it must be some sort of personal metaphor or something.

SOTC: Well it seems kind of natural then that you got the idea for the book during a rain delay...  

Scaletta: Yeah. I'd been wanting to write a baseball book. I went through this big phase in the early 2000s where I was reading baseball books all the time and I wanted to write one. Once I went to the library and checked out like twelve baseball books. And so I wanted to write a baseball story, but I didn't know what it would be about. But the whole idea of a town where it's been raining for twenty-two years really is what helped me plan it. I was watching a baseball game, waiting for the rain to stop. And I thought, 'I wonder how long they'll wait?' I wondered what the longest anybody ever waited was, and what if it didn't stop so they could never make it up?

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