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The Last Shot

City Streets, Basketball Dreams

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

One of Sports Illustrated's "Top 100 Sports Books of All Time"

 

The 2023 "BEST BASKETBALL GIFT" from The Strategist

 

A classic of narrative journalism about four inner-city high school basketball prospects trying to make it to the pros, with a new introduction by the author, now in audio for the first time.

 

The Last Shot: City Streets, Basketball Dreams is the "revelatory" (New York Times), "deeply empathetic" (New Yorker) true story of four teenagers attempting to escape the cycles of poverty, crime, and despair in 1990s Brooklyn by getting recruited to play college basketball. With poignant intimacy, Darcy Frey chronicles the aspirations of these young men, including the future superstar Stephon Marbury, who are among the most promising players in Coney Island. What they have going for them is athletic talent, grace, and years of dedication. But working against them are woefully inadequate schooling, family circumstances that are often desperate, and the slick, brutal world of college athletic recruitment. Incisively and compassionately written, this is Frey's award-winning masterpiece of narrative nonfiction, a startling exposé of inner-city life and the big business of college sports. Narrated by JD Jackson (The Nickel Boys).

"[A] revelatory description of how the basketball myth plays out in the public housing projects of New York's Coney Island, an isolated and impoverished spit of land at the seaward end of Brooklyn.... Vividly describes how the zealous pursuit of hoop glory serves as an inner-city version of the American Dream... [C]ompellingly written, with elegance, economy and just the right amount of outrage." —Brent Staples, New York Times

"Elegiac." — Sports Illustrated

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 29, 1994
      Coney Island, Brooklyn, once New York City's playground, is now an archetypal ghetto, filled with high-rise housing projects and populated almost exclusively by African Americans. High schoolers there attend Abraham Lincoln High, known all around the East Coast for its outstanding basketball teams, where players see the sport as their way out of second-class citizenship. In his first book, Frey, a contributing editor at Harper's and the New York Times Magazine, has composed a sensitive account of a year in the lives of four exceptional players (three seniors and one freshman), their coach and their families, and he shows that the game can indeed be a means of escape in spite of their school's poor academic reputation. But the way out is fraught with difficulties. For instance, Frey offers devastating anecdotes about dishonest college recruiters and about the NCAA. This excellent book is not only about basketball but about realizing a dream, and its appeal should be very wide.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      This book, published in 1994, follows several members of a Coney Island high school basketball team. The author, who is essentially embedded in the school, spends multiple hours with the players as they go through the recruitment process and as they deal with girlfriends and life in a troubled area of New York. JD Jackson brings his usual stellar narration to the audiobook, capturing emotions that range from confusion to frustration. He alternates his intonation in a wonderfully appropriate way, capturing the swagger of one player and the quiet, hopeful personality of another who aspires to be a writer. With just the right touch, Jackson helps the listener peer into the lives and challenges of the athletes. M.B. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine
    • Library Journal

      November 15, 2024

      Journalist and educator Frey's debut, first published in 1994 and now available in audio, chronicles the successes and struggles of four Brooklyn teens longing to become basketball stars and escape the bleak conditions of their Brooklyn neighborhood, where poverty and crime flourish and options are few. Frey narrates the introduction, sharing how he came to write the book and describing the young men at its center: Stephon Marbury, Tchaka Shipp, Corey Johnson, and Russell Thomas. JD Jackson narrates the remaining chapters, infusing the book with a measured calm as he invites listeners into each young man's life. Although all shared a common goal of going to college and were recruited by college scouts, only one (Marbury) ultimately achieved the desired outcome of playing in a Division I school and entering the NBA. Jackson sensitively relates the challenges that threatened to derail their goals, including the NCAA requirement of a minimum SAT score of 700. Throughout the book, Frey questions whether the system provided a fair opportunity for these boys. VERDICT Narrative journalism at its best. This book will resonate with basketball enthusiasts and those interested in the intense stakes of college athletic recruitment.--Misty Schattle

      Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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