Everyone in Rome, Alabama, loves football, except new kid Marcus Brinks, who’ll even fake a heart condition to get out of playing. Everyone in Rome also loves, uh, Rome, with Trevi’s restaurant, a ludi Romani triumphant after-win party, and a heated rivalry with neighboring Carthage. Some of it feels like a cute small-town theme, but the high-school teachers all have Roman emperor names, and we’re talking the also-rans of Roman Civ 101, like Galba and Severus, and this is never addressed. No opportunity for a Roman name is skipped… except the local paper is called the Riverton Times, a missed opportunity to call the sports page Trajan’s Column.
Thank you, my degree in classics is very useful.
After high school, Marcus wrote one perfect grunge-rock album, dedicated to an ex-girlfriend, before having a mental breakdown, and disappearing. With his mom in hospice back in Rome, Marcus returns to care for her and teach high-school English (apparently he got a teaching license in between high-profile arrests). Marcus’ students are much more interested in why he’s not rich than in reading Julius Caesar, but either way, football is still the main interest in Rome.
His old friend Jackson is the successful, egotistical football coach (JC nabbed power after Coach Pumphrey the Great). The Quarterback Club finds JC’s arrogance insufferable and really wants to take him down. There’s no doubt that Caesar’s heading for disaster, with hints from the open-carry campus to his wife’s prophetic dreams, but that doesn’t mean this is gonna be predictable.
The only kind of sour note is that Marcus’ dreamgirl, Becca, was slightly flat, much more of an object than a person. She’s frequently described as hot and beautiful, but Marcus is so obsessed with whether she’s paying attention to him that she doesn’t seem to have any personality. Does she actually like football, Kurt Cobain, being a teacher, any of the men she’s dated? Does she have any goals or desires of her own? She’s very much Marcus’ personal MacGuffin, but the rest of the story carries it.
It is impossible to avoid describing this 1990s alt rock coming-of-age story as a bittersweet symphony of life.
Thanks to Reedsy for the ARC! Bookblogging friends, you can sign up here for free books to review.
Imperfect, by Katy Motiey, tells the story of Vida, a young Iranian mother, and how the…
12-year-old Donn Fendler is on a family hike up a beautiful but challenging mountain, when…
I picked up Pamela Mingle's The Pursuit of Mary Bennet after reading The Bennet Sisters'…
Confessions on the 7:45, by Lisa Unger, is a suspense novel, beginning with two seemingly-random…
I originally read American Born Chinese, a graphic novel by Gene Luen Yang, for a…
Candy Fiesta is an adorable match-3 browser game from CulinarySchools.org. Players can enjoy colorful candies…
View Comments
I love the 90’s nostalgia and the homecoming storyline. Thanks for sharing!
It's unfortunate that the love interest isn't really developed. The rest of the book sounds good though, and I love books set in the 90's.
-Lauren