Red Dirt is the
story of Jaxie Skinner, an unlikely professional tennis
player from a blue-collar family in the sticks of rural
Georgia who takes up the game at the age of three when his
father scrapes a court out of the red clay behind their
farmhouse. He is a natural, rising to the top of junior
tennis, and at eighteen has great success at the French
Open. He falls as quickly as he rose, however, when
troubles back home and injuries arise. He quits the game
for years, but then mounts a comeback, struggling for
almost a decade in the unglamorous, low-paying minor
leagues of tennis, often living out of his van, before
getting one last big shot. A fascinating study of tennis,
its demands and tactics, as well as a look at the insular
and often selfish character required to reach the pinnacle
of the sport, Red Dirt
is the Rocky of
tennis novels.
PRAISE
FOR RED DIRT
"Starnes spins a tale
with the pace and power of a Rafael Nadal forehand."
--Jay Jennings,
editor of Tennis and
the Meaning of Life: A Literary Anthology of the Game
"Alright, literate tennis fans, it's time to put down
the remote and set aside those stat sheets and take an
alternately amusing and inspiring trip from the top of
the pro tennis barrel to the bottom--and back again. Joe
Samuel Starnes's book radiates an aficionado's
understanding of not just how the game is played (on and
off the court) but what it takes to triumph in the
hyper-competitive pro game."
--Peter Bodo, Tennis magazine
senior writer, ESPN columnist,
and co-author of Pete Sampras's autobiography, A
Champion's Mind
"Red Dirt is
solid pleasure. Starnes knows what it is to compete, to
hope to be made whole by competition, to overcome not
just your opponent but your own unquiet. This is a
tennis novel, but any athlete--no, any reader--will
learn a lot and enjoy the learning."
--John Casey,
author of Spartina,
winner of the National Book Award
"Red Dirt isn't
just a terrific sports novel; it's a terrific novel,
period. Jaxie Skinner is a complex and compelling
character, and Starnes gives him a clear, fresh, lively
voice."
--Michael Griffith,
author of Spikes
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Joe Samuel "Sam"
Starnes was born in Alabama, grew up in
Cedartown, Georgia, and has lived in either New Jersey
or Philadelphia since 2000. Red
Dirt is his third novel. His first novel, Calling, was
published in 2005, and was reissued in 2014 as an e-book
by Mysterious Press.com/Open Road. NewSouth Books
published his novel Fall
Line in November 2011, and it was selected to The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution's "Best of the South"
list. He has had journalism appear in
The New York Times, The Washington Post, The
Philadelphia Inquirer, and various magazines,
as well as essays, short stories, and poems in literary
journals. He holds a bachelor's degree in journalism
from the University of Georgia, an MA in English from
Rutgers University in Newark, and an MFA in Creative
Nonfiction from Goucher College. He was awarded a
fellowship to the 2006 Sewanee Writers' Conference. He
works in the administration at Widener University and
has taught writing courses at Widener, Rowan University,
and Saint Joseph's University.
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