47 pages 1 hour read

Mike Lupica

The Big Field

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 2008

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.

Symbols & Motifs

Baseball

Baseball symbolizes life because both produce countless possibilities. In Shel Silverstein’s poem, “Listen to Mustn’ts” (1993), the speaker tells the young reader, “Anything can happen, child, Anything can be” (Line 4). Mike Lupica’s presentation of baseball supports the claim of the famous children’s author. After Hutch commits the game-one error, Cody says, “What do you always tell me when I ask you why some game ended in some weird way?” Hutch answers, “I tell you that it’s baseball.” Cody concludes, “Baseball happened tonight” (183). In baseball, as in life, the unexpected occurs. Hutch can’t let his surprise error faze him, and people can’t let mistakes and unpredictable events stop them. Since “[a]nything can happen,” something amazing can follow something adverse. In game two, Hutch makes a Jeter-esque “flip” play. In baseball and life, the good and bad mix together; people can neither let the negative bring them down, nor let the positive inflate them. Thus, Hutch doesn’t heed the media attention about the error or the “flip” play: He stays level.

Hutch makes the symbolism explicit when he says, “In a lot of ways, it was like baseball, if you really thought about it.

Related Titles

By Mike Lupica

Study Guide

logo

Million Dollar Throw

Mike Lupica

Million Dollar Throw

Mike Lupica

Study Guide

logo

Summer Ball

Mike Lupica

Summer Ball

Mike Lupica

Study Guide

logo

The House of Wolves

James Patterson, Mike Lupica

The House of Wolves

James Patterson, Mike Lupica

Study Guide

logo

The Underdogs

Mike Lupica

The Underdogs

Mike Lupica

Study Guide

logo

Travel Team

Mike Lupica

Travel Team

Mike Lupica