"Josh Wilker's "Cardboard Gods" is a poignant and vivid account of
how and why he accessed baseball cards as a survival tool while
negotiating a 1970s childhood marked by changing mores and
confusing mixed messages. This is a story of brotherly love,
survival of the also-ran, and the hope that quickens a kid's
heartbeat each time he rips open a fresh pack of baseball cards,
gets a whiff of bubble gum, and, holding his breath, sees who he's
got as opposed to who and what he needs. If you love the writing of
Dave Eggers or Augusten Burroughs, you just may love Josh Wilker's
"Cardboard Gods," too. I did."
--Wally Lamb, "New York Times" bestselling author of "She's Come
Undone" and "The Hour I First Believed"
"Josh Wilker writes as beautifully about baseball and life as
anyone ever has."
--Rob Neyer, ESPN
"This is a story, at its heart, about growing up in America. More
specifically it's about growing up at a time when country, author,
and the great American game of baseball were simultaneously in a
state of flux. Hippies, post-Watergate Nixonites, parents, kids,
teens, and even baseball, forever altered with the introduction of
free agency, all grasping at a murky, anxious future. Josh Wilker,
using seemingly random baseball cards pulled from his childhood,
and the memories and metaphors they invoke, guides us through the
restless and awkward story of his life (so far) with grace, pain,
and ultimately vindication. In short, it's a story about baseball
and America and his (our) generation."
--David Cross, actor, comedian, and author of "I Drink for a
Reason"
" "Cardboard Gods" is more than just a book. It is something that I
lived and live still. I was the older brother. I live on Route 14
like Josh once did. My two sons were those boys in the picture, VW
bus and all. "Cardboard Gods" awakened feelings in me that I have
long suppressed. It is a growth book, like "Catcher in the Rye" .
People, especially people who love baseball, will carryd
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