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Pound for Pound by F. X. Toole — book cover

Pound for Pound

by F. X. Toole, James Ellroy
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Overview

Pound for pound is a story of family, honor, perseverance, and forgiveness. Set in towns where violence is the norm and success stories take on an almost mythic importance, it tells of grandfathers and grandsons - older men for whom life has not been easy and the young men who look to them for guidance - and reveals the transformative power of that relationship. Dan Cooley, an aging but legendary Los Angeles trainer, takes on a troubled young fighter named Chicky Garza, hungry to make a name for himself in the San Antonio boxing circuit, which is rife with crime and corruption. The bond between them grows more powerful than the obstacles they face, ultimately reviving in each man the courage it takes to triumph both in and out of the ring.

Synopsis

Following his remarkable fiction debut, Rope Burns, author F. X. Toole's Pound for Pound is a big, brawny novel of honor, perseverance, family, and forgiveness, set in towns where violence is the norm and success stories take on an almost mythic importance. It is the story of Dan Cooley, an aging, legendary Los Angeles trainer, who takes on Chicky Garza, a troubled young fighter hungry for glory in the notoriously corrupt San Antonio boxing circuit. Written in the masterful style that has earned the author glowing comparisons to Ernest Hemingway, Raymond Carver, and Frank McCourt, this unforgettable posthumous novel celebrates a unique and powerful bond, and the courage that overcomes insurmountable obstacles in and out of the ring.

Publishers Weekly

Toole, who died before seeing the Oscar-winning movie adaptation of his short story "Million Dollar Baby," weighs in posthumously with this bruising smoker of a novel. (The novel was "shaped," notes James Ellroy in the introduction, from a 900-page manuscript by Toole's agent and a freelance editor.) Dan Cooley, a onetime contender who has outlived his wife and children and whose life revolves around his grandson, Tim Pat, goes off the rails after Tim Pat is killed in a traffic accident. As Cooley vacillates between booze-fueled suicidal thoughts and fantasies of homicidal vengeance, Hispanic teenager Eduardo "Chicky" Garza y Duffy begins his troubled ascent in the amateur boxing world. That these two men, separated by thousands of miles, ethnicity and generations, will become the vehicle for one another's redemption is inevitable, but Toole's unsentimental prose and knack for creating tragic characters (whose sufferings, in turn, lead to plausible triumphs) overcome the ready-made plot. Cooley's thesis, that prize fighting, for all its apparent brutality, is a sport that rewards wisdom, skill and (at times) fair play informs Toole's writing; the result is a stunning cap to a short but brilliant writing career. (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

About the Author, F. X. Toole

F. X. Toole was born in 1930. Having worked as a bullfighter, professional boxing "cut man," taxi driver, and saloon keeper, Toole published his first book of fiction at age seventy. He died in 2002, before seeing his short story "Million Dollar Baby" become an Academy Award-winning film.

Reviews

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Editorials

Richard Russo

"That this posthumous novel is the last such gift we’ll receive from a great writer makes it even more special."

Edgardo Vega Yunque

"Toole writes beautifully . . . an homage to the resiliency and strength of the human spirit."

People Magazine

"Gripping. . . [Toole] can rest easy – the task has been aced."

Seattle Times

". . .engaging. . . riveting. . ."

New York Daily News

"...a fine-tuned sense of the ring and... a large, colorful cast...Call it a winner. . ."

Sports Illustrated

". . . there is no quit in them, nor was there in Toole...he wrote with a boxer’s heart."

Philadelphia Inquirer

"The true appeal in Toole’s writing is in detail and in his ability as a pure storyteller."

San Francisco Chronicle

". . . the reader thanks Mr. Toole here, and forever after, for his last and greatest work."

TIME Magazine

"POUND FOR POUND is that most absorbing of pleasures, a great boxing novel."

Hartford Courant

"The brutality of boxing ties this book together, but Toole also understands what makes people love it."

The Oregonian (Portland)

"The savagery of "Pound for Pound" is inextricably melded with profound sweetness. That’s how F.X. Toole saw the world."

Charlotte Observer

"[Toole’s] a page-turning writer with guts and heart. . ."

People

“Gripping. . . [Toole] can rest easythe task has been aced.”

Kansas.com

"Toole’s sentences are tough, spare and full of his obvious belief in the solace of friendship and forgiveness."

USA Today

"...memorable characters, gritty authenticity and spare, energetic writing."

Detroit Free Press

"Toole, a page-turning writer with guts. . ."

San Antonio Express-News

"F.X. Toole is bigger in death than he was in life."

Los Angeles Times

"‘Pound for Pound’ contains some of the most lucidly crystalline descriptions of boxing...F.X. Toole was an extraordinary talent..."

Washington Post

"Toole has an undeniable knack for crafting instantly believable characters..."

Entertainment Weekly

"POUND proves that a flurry of emotional jabs can be just as powerful as one knockout punch."

Time Magazine

“POUND FOR POUND is that most absorbing of pleasures, a great boxing novel.”

Publishers Weekly

Toole, who died before seeing the Oscar-winning movie adaptation of his short story "Million Dollar Baby," weighs in posthumously with this bruising smoker of a novel. (The novel was "shaped," notes James Ellroy in the introduction, from a 900-page manuscript by Toole's agent and a freelance editor.) Dan Cooley, a onetime contender who has outlived his wife and children and whose life revolves around his grandson, Tim Pat, goes off the rails after Tim Pat is killed in a traffic accident. As Cooley vacillates between booze-fueled suicidal thoughts and fantasies of homicidal vengeance, Hispanic teenager Eduardo "Chicky" Garza y Duffy begins his troubled ascent in the amateur boxing world. That these two men, separated by thousands of miles, ethnicity and generations, will become the vehicle for one another's redemption is inevitable, but Toole's unsentimental prose and knack for creating tragic characters (whose sufferings, in turn, lead to plausible triumphs) overcome the ready-made plot. Cooley's thesis, that prize fighting, for all its apparent brutality, is a sport that rewards wisdom, skill and (at times) fair play informs Toole's writing; the result is a stunning cap to a short but brilliant writing career. (Aug.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

The late Toole, a veteran "cut man" and trainer as well as author of the story on which the movie Million Dollar Baby was based, writes about boxing the way Hemingway wrote about bullfighting. This novel, left unfinished when he died, is the story of Eduardo "Chicky" Garza, a young San Antonio fighter and grandson of one-time contender Eloy "Texas Wolf" Garza. When Chicky is cheated out of a shot at the Olympic team, his grandfather encourages him to move to Los Angeles and find trainer Dan Cooley, a former boxer who lost to the grandfather 40 years earlier in a fixed fight. Though struggling with a deep depression brought on by the accidental death of his young grandson, Cooley decides to take Chicky on, paving the way for him to face the fighter who cheated him. The result is powerful and very readable, if somewhat sentimental, and Toole's deep love of boxing's rituals, traditions, and code of honor shines through. Even readers uninterested in the fight may find the novel compelling. Recommended for public libraries. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/06.]-Lawrence Rungren, Merrimack Valley Lib. Consortium, Andover, MA Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

From the late author (1930-2002) of the short story (from the collection Rope Burns>\i>, 2000) that inspired the movie Million Dollar Baby comes Toole's only novel, a tough, tender tale about boxing people. Protagonists Dan Cooley, trainer, and Chicky Garza, prize-fighting tyro, have both suffered the jabs and hooks of outrageous fortune. Cooley has been stalked by tragedy, culminating in the terrible accident that cost him his beloved grandson. Seventeen-year-old Chicky has been brought up by a grandfather who loves him and heroin in equal measure. We see Cooley trying to cope with loss and self-loathing, a struggle that often overwhelms him. We see Chicky exploited and betrayed by the criminal element that clings like barnacles to the bottom side of boxing. Both are severely battered and punchy, so much so that by the time they connect, neither has the emotional wherewithal for optimism about any kind of relationship. But Cooley spots the talent in Chicky and can't resist it. To Chicky, Cooley is the teacher/father he's been desperately searching for. Thus, for each other, they represent at least the possibility of a life redeemed. Not a flawless novel-it softens noticeably in the middle-but the characters are irresistible, and their gritty, savage, strangely noble world is vividly evoked, by the real-life boxing trainer whose real name was Jerry Boyd.

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2007
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
416
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780060881344

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