I’ve spent much of the week happily engrossed in a novel written by a friend. Brave in Season, by Jon Volkmer, tells the story of a group of Black railroad workers in the 1950s who spend part of a summer in a small Nebraska town, where interactions between the “gandy dancers” (as the railroad men are called) and the townspeople are mostly cordial but reach a climax in an exhibition baseball game. Described as “a novel of race, railroads, and baseball,” Brave in Season is that and more: It is a beautiful evocation of small-town America and a touching coming-of-age story (the title is taken from a poem by A.E. Housman). It has memorable characters, emotional scenes, and occasional drama. In fact, it would make an excellent movie – a better one, I suspect, than the fantastical Field of Dreams. And Nebraska’s most famous director – Alexander Payne – would be the perfect person to make it.

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