The Risk Pool

The Risk Pool

First edition cover
Author Richard Russo
Country United States
Language English
Genre Bildungsroman
Publisher

Random House (hardcover)

Vintage (paperback)
Publication date
1988-09-12 (1st edition)
Media type Print (Hardcover, Trade paperback)
Pages 479 pages (hardcover 1st edition)
ISBN 0-394-56527-4 (hardcover 1st edition)
OCLC 17803510
813/.54 19
LC Class PS3568.U812 R57 1988

The Risk Pool is Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Richard Russo's second novel. First published in 1988, The Risk Pool is a Bildungsroman or "coming of age" novel set in fictional Mohawk, New York, a dying blue-collar town. The Risk Pool was well received by critics, such as The New York Times, which called it a "superbly original, maliciously funny book" and praised Russo's "brilliant, deadpan writing."[1] Warner Bros. Pictures is reportedly developing a movie based on the book, with Tom Hanks starring as Ned Hall's father and Lawrence Kasdan writing the script and directing.[2]

Plot introduction

The plot follows narrator Ned Hall through four periods of his life, focusing specifically on Hall's relationship with his loutish and, in his best friend's words, "rockheaded" father.

Influences

Many important elements of The Risk Pool were based on the author's own experience growing up in Gloversville, New York, a town similar to Russo's fictional Mohawk. Like Mohawk, Gloversville's economy is centered around the leather industry, and both towns suffered economic decline in the second half of the twentieth century. In a 1993 interview with The San Francisco Chronicle, Russo revealed that his own father had exhibited many of the same characteristics as Sam Hall. Russo's father "lived a life of studied bad habits," leaving his wife and ignoring his son until he was "old enough to follow him into the OTB and then into the bar and then into the pool hall."[3] In The Risk Pool, Sam Hall interacts with his son Ned at an earlier age, but much of their time together is spent in bars, pool halls, and gambling establishments. Some of Ned's life experiences mirror the author's. Both left upstate New York to attend college in the Southwest United States, and both started and subsequently abandoned PhD programs.[3]

Release details

Reviews

References

  1. Sullivan, 1988
  2. Fleming, Michael (2004-04-29). "Hanks dives into 'Pool'". Variety (magazine). Retrieved 2006-01-08.
  3. 1 2 Madrigal, Alix (1993-07-04). "Author's Real Dad, Hometown Inspire 'Nobody's Fool'". The San Francisco Chronicle.


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