Sins
of the Tribe by Mark A. Salter 400 pages
I
grew up in the southern United States where college football was/is king.
Especially in my home state of Arkansas, where cotton, rice, soybeans and the
Razorback football made up most conversations. (When I was planning my wedding,
Daddy told me that he was unavailable September through December,
non-negotiable. Such is the power of college football. I married in July.)
Mark
A. Slater’s first novel takes on the dark underbelly of college football and
combines it with the deep human need for connections, to be with one’s own.
Football teams are the perfect example of a tribe working, playing, protecting each
other and dominating the other teams. And wow, does Slater pack a punch!
The
story centers two young Georgia men, Wally and Henry. Henry suffers from an
undiagnosed medical condition that I would describe as autism, but I’m not a
doctor. Henry’s talent is his ability to kick a football. As long as Wally is
the holder, Henry NEVER MISSES, whether it’s from twenty yards or sixty yards.
Henry NEVER MISSES.
As
kids, Wally suffered parental abuse while Henry was left largely ignored. Wally
dreamed of attending Bastille University and becoming a member of the Tribe
football team. (So much symbolism in that choice of moniker.) He had the grades
to be accepted but not the financial resources. When the scouts come calling,
Henry is offered a full ride, provided he can do he scholastic work, and where
Henry goes, Wally goes, so the university makes it happen.
In
the first half of the book, the team is led by Coach John Oldham. He and his
coaching staff are trying to build decent young men as well as win football
games. The team coalesces into a tribe that works hard and plays hard. Coach Oldham
reminded of what I thought Bear Bryant would have been like.
In
the second half of the book, Coach Oldham is replaced by Coach Castritt. The
staff he brings with him have the same belief: Winning is the only thing and
everything.
Castritt
and his staff don’t care about the team as individuals. Players are dehumanized
and believe they can get away with anything and everything, from treating
others as dirt to committing a horrendous crime. How Wally navigates this new
regime is what makes this book a page turner.
One
thing did irritate me though. One of the teams that the Tribe played against
with the Arkansas A&M Aggies. No
such school. It’s Texas A&M. All the
other colleges/universities were given the correct name.
“Sins of the Tribe” receives 5 out of 5 stars
in Julie’s world.
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