Copyright Date:
2024
Edition Date:
2024
Release Date:
09/10/24
Pages:
242 pages
ISBN:
0-06-306964-4
ISBN 13:
978-0-06-306964-0
Dewey:
Fic
LCCN:
2023932673
Dimensions:
22 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
(Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Being the best on the court doesn't mean you don't have a lot to learn about playing the game of lifeBeing a top-ranked player comes with a lot of new pressures for 14-year-old basketball phenom Kofi Douglass. Though their Milwaukee community has suffered a recent tragic loss, Kofi and his mother are also still reeling from the day his father was arrested seven years ago-and basketball has become a complicated way of coping. Through all the challenges, Kofi has a staunch best friend in Mecca, but even she's beginning to recognize how he's started to let basketball and his ego get in his own way. Meanwhile, former friend (now bitter rival) Ripp Ransom will take advantage of any misstep to get ahead of Kofi, leading to some action-packed showdowns on the court. These scenes, coupled with flashbacks that contextualize Kofi's story, make for a compelling sports drama with a lot of heart. In this stand-alone companion toShot Clock (2022), the authors believably frame Kofi's slow path toward maturity on and off the court, presenting it as the real key to his overall success. Ballplayers will appreciate the hoops details, playful slang, and healthy dose of trash talk, while the images of healing from loss and unfairness will be accessible and refreshing for any readers. The cast members predominantly read Black.Thoughtfully portrays a boy who's balancing hoop dreams and emotional maturity to achieve impressive ends.(Fiction. 10-14)
Kirkus Reviews
Being the best on the court doesn't mean you don't have a lot to learn about playing the game of lifeBeing a top-ranked player comes with a lot of new pressures for 14-year-old basketball phenom Kofi Douglass. Though their Milwaukee community has suffered a recent tragic loss, Kofi and his mother are also still reeling from the day his father was arrested seven years ago-and basketball has become a complicated way of coping. Through all the challenges, Kofi has a staunch best friend in Mecca, but even she's beginning to recognize how he's started to let basketball and his ego get in his own way. Meanwhile, former friend (now bitter rival) Ripp Ransom will take advantage of any misstep to get ahead of Kofi, leading to some action-packed showdowns on the court. These scenes, coupled with flashbacks that contextualize Kofi's story, make for a compelling sports drama with a lot of heart. In this stand-alone companion toShot Clock (2022), the authors believably frame Kofi's slow path toward maturity on and off the court, presenting it as the real key to his overall success. Ballplayers will appreciate the hoops details, playful slang, and healthy dose of trash talk, while the images of healing from loss and unfairness will be accessible and refreshing for any readers. The cast members predominantly read Black.Thoughtfully portrays a boy who's balancing hoop dreams and emotional maturity to achieve impressive ends.(Fiction. 10-14)
Former NBA All-Star Caron Butler and acclaimed author Justin A. Reynolds deliver another superstar performance in this companion novel to Shot Clock about KO, a budding AAU basketball star as he attempts to find redemption on the court and reconnection with his incarcerated father.
Kofi “KO” Douglas knows how to handle pressure. After all, he is the newly announced #1 ranked AAU player in the country. On the court, his game is as good as it gets—even if his Wolves team lost to the Sabres in the national championship, KO always believes nobody can beat him one-on-one. That is, until his former best friend, Ripp, returns home, just in time for the biggest tournament of the summer, the McNabby. Ripp’s dad plays professional basketball overseas, and Ripp has been tearing up courts there—KO now has his toughest competition yet.
As KO gears up for this latest challenge, there’s game-changing news at home. KO’s dad, who has been incarcerated for the last seven years, is getting out. It’s been KO and his mom for as long as he can remember, only now his dad is ready to reconnect. It’s another reunion KO isn’t sure he wants to happen, especially as Ripp keeps calling out KO to play him in the McNabby.
With the tournament on the horizon, KO decides to turn to Coach James and the Sabres for help. He may not love the idea of playing with Tony Washington and his former teammates again, but he needs them now more than ever. Can KO prove he’s still the best on the court as his family life turns upside down?