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'The Art of Fielding's' Harbach has gone from poverty to literary fame; it's quite a change-up

NEW YORK - There are author success stories. There's winning the lottery.

"The Art of Fielding"

NEW YORK - There are author success stories. There's winning the lottery. And then there's Chad Harbach.

A long-suffering, often-starving MFA graduate, Harbach spent much of his 20s and 30s working temp jobs so he could write a novel, sometimes with barely $100 in his bank account.

He thought no one would ever read his book, titled "The Art of Fielding." It featured, after all, some pretty ambitious literary writing, a prominent gay character and a baseball motif, all no-nos for anyone with aspirations to the fiction bestseller list.

But after a decade of working and reworking, things began to turn around. Agency rejections turned into representation. Editor ambivalence transformed into interest. Harbach's book, a tale of how lives at a fictional Midwestern university are toppled after a young shortstop's wild throw, became almost magically sought-after - so much so that the publisher Little, Brown and Co. paid more than $650,000 to secure publishing rights during a fierce bidding war.

Blurbs from John Irving and Jonathan Franzen followed. So did a Vanity Fair story about Harbach and the back story of the book's publication. When the novel came out last September to glowing reviews, "The Art of Fielding" had become a freight train. It has since sold more than 250,000 copies. HBO has optioned it in the hope of turning it into a series.

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But for all the envy his story might elicit, Harbach's life since the frenzy has hardly been simple. As the book is released this month in paperback, and as the author prepares for an appearance at the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, his rise has also led some to paint a target on his back. It also has highlighted a vexing question: What happens when you attain unexpected literary fame?

More specifically, what happens when you live in poverty for years, consumed with something no one knows or cares about, and then seemingly overnight become the kind of figure people flock to see, parsing every sentence you write as though it's the word of God or, perhaps better, a new Harry Potter novel?

"It's a huge contrast, and I'm not sure I was really ready for it," Harbach said, a few days before his festival appearance. "When I was writing all those years, I spent all this time thinking about something that you literally can't talk about with anyone; no one wants to go through the intricate crises you're going through writing a book. And then it all changes, and that's all anyone wants to talk about."

"The Art of Fielding" concerns Henry Skrimshander, an unremarkable physical specimen who, thanks to a fictional baseball handbook and a kind of innate precociousness, becomes a prized shortstop at the fictional Midwestern Westish College. But his errant throw soon injures another player, causing a chain reaction that makes Henry question his own talent and sense of self. The novel is populated with light and whimsical characters - including his gay roommate Owen Dunne and the larger-than life university president, the avowed straight bachelor Guert Affenlight who finds himself pining for a man - as a campus novel's themes of lost innocence play out against a backdrop of the diamond.

After growing up in Racine, Wis., Harbach attended Harvard, where he studied Herman Melville and other American greats. Several years after graduation, having not written or published much, he was accepted to an MFA program at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville after submitting a baseball-themed story set on a college campus, which he then tried to develop into a novel; he also co-founded a small literary magazine.

Rejected countless times by the mainstream publishing apparatus, he was discovered by a New York literary agent named Chris Parris-Lamb, and the wheels for "The Art of Fielding" were finally in motion.

Harbach's editor, Little, Brown chief Michael Pietsch, acknowledges that "The Art of Fielding" was "one of the hardest kind of books to launch, because when you describe it, it sounds like something totally unsurprising - a baseball novel about falling in love."

He said he believed it was the prose that ultimately persuaded critics and readers. "The key to marketing is the book itself. We knew it would win over anyone who picked it up."

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Not every reader or critic has found it so winning, and the result has been something of a backlash.

Since his fame has grown, Harbach has tried to stay focused.Pietsch says that Harbach's own Midwestern roots helped the author stay grounded.

"When I first met Chad I noticed this clearly observing eye, but also felt this embodiment of sweetness and modesty," he said.

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