THE RIGHT HAND
by
Book Details
About the Book
Andy St. John is a different kind of young man, especially considering the career he has chosen to pursue. College educated, with a comfortable if not privileged upbringing, he walks away from a most certain future of financial stability and success in the business world, to test his skills against other men in a twenty foot square ring. Andy’s opponents are fighting to escape their backgrounds, to rise above the streets, the stereotypes, and futures that are just as predestined as his own, though sadly leading to the complete opposite side of the lifestyle spectrum.
Andy knows that he is atypical. He also realizes that the pure, athletic beauty of the sport he loves is deeply flawed by corruption. The supreme effort it takes to rise above these obstacles, notwithstanding what it requires to simply overcome the primary challenges within the ropes, is enough to make most men seek an easier path. Andy, however, stays focused on the mission. There is such commitment and honesty within his pursuit that many of the people he encounters along the way choose to align with him, if for nothing else than to share in the refreshing spirit and positive force he brings to their lives. There are the others though, with their secretive and greed ridden agendas, who seek only to exploit the talented and popular middleweight. They have the money, the connections and the power, while Andy remains steadfast in the middle – independent and unattached, totally driven and unwilling to compromise his ethics.
From that first boxing match in
“The Right Hand” will hook you early, and keep you engaged as if you were at ringside for a championship fight. Be fairly warned though, there are few missed punches here. It’s a ten round slugfest from bell to bell.
About the Author
Mark Troth was born in
“The Right Hand” is his first novel, and it was over ten years in the writing. His family and career always took precedence, and justly so he says, but then admittedly such priorities resulted in far too many months of creative dormancy as he labored with this effort. Still, the passion continued to smolder. With an appetite for the words and a desire to tell a story that could take him back to the simpler, less structured and somewhat restless times of his youth, he persevered.
Although this story is mostly fiction, it is in some part, autobiographical. In his early twenties, Mark was a professional prize fighter – which was quite the contradiction he feels, for a white college boy from a middle class suburban neighborhood in
Like the novel’s main character, Andy St. John, Mark did not want to look back on his life at age fifty, which is his current age today, and never know what might have been. He took his best shot, and chased a dream.