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Be the One

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
From the author of North of Montana ("The writing has the taut, perfect tone of a well-tuned string"—Scott Turow), a spellbinding new thriller about ambition taken to unexpected, and deadly, extremes.
Cassidy Sanderson is a scout for the Los Angeles Dodgers—the only female scout in the major leagues. Hard-living and hard-drinking, a gifted athlete herself, she takes pride in successfully competing in a male world. But recently she has been losing prospects on the sign, and her job security is teetering on the edge. When she gets a tip from a close friend and fellow scout about Alberto Cruz, a young phenom in the Dominican Republic, she impulsively catches a flight to Santo Domingo—even though it is out of her territory and she will undoubtedly incur her boss's wrath. If Alberto Cruz is as good as she's been told, the trip will be worth the risk.
The risk starts quickly. Not only has Cruz "got it all—the heart, the guts, the aptitude," he may also have "a bad spirit on him." And he's not the only man Cassidy meets on the island who might change her life for good or ill. The other is Joe Galinis, a powerful financier and real estate developer, "one of the most provocative men she has ever met." When Cassidy returns to Los Angeles, she finds herself entangled in a blackmail scheme laced with otherworldly vodou and real-life violence: a tightening triangle of suspicion and deception that leads her to the back rooms (and backstabbing) of high-stakes sports and finance—where she is about to discover that there is a thin line between a competitor and a killer.
Once again, April Smith gives us a novel of nonstop suspense—large in scope, emotionally rich, and built around a central character of striking originality and substance. It is an electrifying read.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 29, 2000
      Cassidy Sanderson, the 35-year-old heroine of Smith's (North of Montana) tough, smart novel, is a baseball scout for the L.A. DodgersDthe only woman scout in the major leagues in 1994. On a hot tip from her godfather, Pedro, a "successful bird-dog scout, " she goes to the Dominican Republic in pursuit of a young center fielder named Alberto Cruz. During this unauthorized trip, she meets Joe Galinis, a downtown-L.A. developer to whom she is immediately drawn. She and Joe, along with Alberto, drive drunk into a hurricane, and a confusing accident in the violent murky weather (related in interspersed flashbacks) yields misfortune that follows them back to Los Angeles. As Cassidy gets Alberto into training in California, the action, somewhat sluggish at the outset, quickens: Alberto and Joe receive anonymous blackmail notes, and Cassidy runs into danger on a trip to view spring training in Vero Beach, Fla. The Dodgers and the L.A. and Vero Beach police departments get involved, which stands to jeopardize the careers of Alberto, Joe and CassidyDas well as the romance developing between the latter two. To Cassidy, baseball is more than business: formerly a pro softball player, she has always been a pioneer; in addition, she's living out the expectations of her beloved, deceased brother. Befriended in Vero Beach by detective Nate Allen, who later ends up in L.A. on official business, she faces a host of difficult decisions. Smith's characters are hard to empathize withDCassidy, in particular, keeps her game face so assiduously that the reader only sometimes glimpses her vulnerabilitiesDand a major leap in determining the blackmailer's motive isn't confirmed until the end, which threatens the story's plausibility. While the writing is generally firm and judicious, Smith's prose sometimes swerves into the overly ornate. But this ambitious novel, much to its credit, does venture beyond these ambivalences to provocatively rephrase the perennial tale of a woman in a man's world. 75,000 first printing.

    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2000
      In Smith's latest, hard-drinking Cassidy Sanderson--the only female scout in the major leagues--encounters two men in the Dominican Republic who change her life: a phenomenal young player and a seductive older agent. Soon all three are enmeshed in blackmail.

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • School Library Journal

      June 1, 2000
      Cassidy Sanderson, the 35-year-old heroine of Smith's (North of Montana) tough, smart novel, is a baseball scout for the L.A. Dodgers-the only woman scout in the major leagues in 1994. On a hot tip from her godfather, Pedro, a "successful bird-dog scout, " she goes to the Dominican Republic in pursuit of a young center fielder named Alberto Cruz. During this unauthorized trip, she meets Joe Galinis, a downtown-L.A. developer to whom she is immediately drawn. She and Joe, along with Alberto, drive drunk into a hurricane, and a confusing accident in the violent murky weather (related in interspersed flashbacks) yields misfortune that follows them back to Los Angeles. As Cassidy gets Alberto into training in California, the action, somewhat sluggish at the outset, quickens: Alberto and Joe receive anonymous blackmail notes, and Cassidy runs into danger on a trip to view spring training in Vero Beach, Fla. The Dodgers and the L.A. and Vero Beach police departments get involved, which stands to jeopardize the careers of Alberto, Joe and Cassidy-as well as the romance developing between the latter two. To Cassidy, baseball is more than business: formerly a pro softball player, she has always been a pioneer; in addition, she's living out the expectations of her beloved, deceased brother. Befriended in Vero Beach by detective Nate Allen, who later ends up in L.A. on official business, she faces a host of difficult decisions. Smith's characters are hard to empathize with-Cassidy, in particular, keeps her game face so assiduously that the reader only sometimes glimpses her vulnerabilities-and a major leap in determining the blackmailer's motive isn't confirmed until the end, which threatens the story's plausibility. While the writing is generally firm and judicious, Smith's prose sometimes swerves into the overly ornate. But this ambitious novel, much to its credit, does venture beyond these ambivalences to provocatively rephrase the perennial tale of a woman in a man's world. 75,000 first printing. (July)

      Copyright 2000 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2000
      Smith follows her celebrated debut, "North of Montana" (1994), with an intriguing baseball thriller about the major leagues' only female scout. On a tip from her mentor, Dodger scout Cassidy Sanderson travels to the Dominican Republic in search of a "phenom," sweet-swinging 18-year-old Alberto Cruz. She finds and signs her phenom, but while in Central America, she also meets slick developer Joe Galinis, who looks like the man of her dreams. Back in L.A., however, the dreams turn quickly to nightmares. Cassidy, Cruz, and Galinis find themselves in the middle of a voodoo-laced blackmail plot, and as the violence escalates, it becomes harder and harder to know whom to trust. The thriller elements here are capably presented, but it is the baseball story that really gives the novel its appeal. Smith delivers plenty of details about what scouts do, and she introduces the feminist theme--Who says Cassidy can't close a deal as tightly as a male scout?--with sensitivity and intelligence. She also builds her character from the ground up, showing how Cassidy came to love the game and putting a very human face on the sexism that denies talented girls the opportunity to compete with the best. A fine thriller but an even better sports novel. ((Reviewed May 15, 2000))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2000, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      June 15, 2000
      The high-testosterone world of professional baseball scouting is the backdrop for a story about the only female scout in the majors. Dogged by bad luck in her previous choices, Cassidy Sanderson needs to sign at least one credible major league prospect and jumps at the chance of taking on Dominican pitcher Alberto Cruz. She signs him, but her last night in the Dominican Republic includes too much booze, an accident, and an impending hurricane. When both she and Alberto start getting increasingly violent threats, she learns that their car had hit and killed a woman, providing an excuse for extortion. At the same time, Cassidy tries to salvage her career and Alberto's while coming to terms with personal betrayals by people she trusted. Admirers of Sara Paretsky's V.I. Warshawski would like Cassidy. Smith is also the author of North of Montana. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 3/1/00.]--Marylaine Block, "Librarian Without Walls," Davenport, IA

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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