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Paperback ©2012 | -- |
Basketball. Fiction.
Teamwork (Sports). Fiction.
Conduct of life. Fiction.
High schools. Fiction.
Schools. Fiction.
African Americans. Fiction.
Riding the fast track to the NBA is fifteen-year-old Drew Robinson--pegged to be the next LeBron James. While maneuvering his world of basketball handlers, Drew becomes mesmerized by a mysterious, long-lost legend. This an appealing, discernible cautionary tale, and the spot-on basketball action and likable characters support the narrative.
School Library JournalGr 8 Up-Lupica scores another winner with this cautionary tale of Drew "True" Robinson, a high school junior basketball phenom who almost gets lost in the perks and fame that come his way. When Oakley Academy owner Seth Gilbert witnesses Drew's passing and shooting talents, he moves the teen and his mother from New York to California, enrolls him at Oakley, gives Drew's mother a job, and takes charge of Drew's life. The teen readily accepts the computer, chauffeur, and comforts that Gilbert provides. But his starstruck self-perception is shaken when he befriends a mysterious "playground legend," who ultimately explains his own fall from grace. Drew begins to see the consequences of his self-absorbed life: opting for unsuccessful, show-stopping shots instead of passing to an open teammate, flaunting his skills and alienating a girl he likes, letting others help with his schoolwork, and allowing a devoted friend and teammate take the blame when he wrecks the owner's Maserati. In an emotional confrontation with Mr. Gilbert, Drew announces that he will start thinking for himself, making decisions based on his own values of honesty, compassion, and fairness. Loaded with action-packed, suspenseful basketball sequences, crisp dialogue, sharply drawn characters, and keen insight into contemporary basketball culture in America, Drew's story illuminates the realities and choices facing gifted young athletes. Although Drew's talent is basketball, teens will discover in him a universal adolescent need for acceptance, friendship, independence, and self-respect. Gerry Larson, formerly at Durham School of the Arts, NC
ALA BooklistLupica's latest plants a 15-year-old basketball phenom at a personal crossroads where he is offered the customary devil's bargain. Already drawing national notice as a rising talent, point guard Drew "True" Robinson has been taken under the golden wing of a plutocrat patron and enticed to transfer to an exclusive private academy where the lionization even extends to having much of his schoolwork "taken care of" so that he can focus on his game. No sooner does Drew start to accept such privileges as his due, though, than he is brought up short rtly by a pair of hard-nosed coaches, partly by his own dismay after self-serving behavior on the court results in two devastating losses, and partly by the sobering example of Urban "Legend" Sellers, a bitter older dude with mad playground-ball skills. Before an arrogance-fueled fall, Sellers had a future as bright as his own. Written in a fluid mix of slightly distant exposition and terse dialogue, the tale features plenty of suspenseful, expertly depicted hoops action along with choices both wrong and, ultimately, right made in the face of glittering temptations. Drew earns his sobriquet several times over by the end. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Sports columnist and ESPN host Lupica has leveraged his sportswriting chops into a series of best-selling novels for young athletes.
Kirkus ReviewsIn a didactic but well-crafted sports story, a teen basketball phenomenon learns not to take his own superstar future for granted. Not yet 16, Drew "True" Robinson has been treated like a star since some of his first forays onto the basketball court. When he spots a talented, solitary older player on his neighborhood court late one night, Drew thinks he's seen a ghost. What he's met is a cautionary tale: The man, who tells Drew to call him Donald, is a former basketball legend who lost everything when he became too invested in the hype surrounding him. When Drew too begins to make mistakes on the court, he seeks out Donald, haunted by the man's story. Like Donald, most characters function equally well as symbols and as people: Mr. Gilbert, the rich benefactor who treats Drew like a luxury commodity; Drew's teammate and best friend, Lee, content to pick up Drew's off-the-court slack for the good of the game. The clear message here is that young athletes should not let fame go to their heads, a case made so well by the story that Drew's continued arrogance and poor decision-making is sometimes difficult to believe. A solid mix of character-driven realism and basketball action. (Fiction. 12-18)
Horn Book
School Library Journal
Voice of Youth Advocates
ALA Booklist
Kirkus Reviews
It started with him thinking he’d seen a ghost.
A basketball ghost.
A ghost in a gray hooded sweatshirt, no writing on the front or back, one that seemed way too warm even for a Southern California night, and almost two sizes too big for his long, skinny
body. The guy was six three or six four, easy.
He was wearing baggy blue jeans, the carpenter kind with pockets, faded nearly to white. They seemed to hang on him, too, like they were about to fall down around his ankles.
He had old Air Jordans on him, old-school classics, high-top red-and-blacks.
Drew Robinson recognized the shoes right away because he always did. Nobody knew old-time basketball kicks better than he did. He knew these shoes because he’d just bought a pair for himself off Classickicks.com, where he went for sneaks out of the past you couldn’t find anywhere else.
The ghost also had a beat-up Lakers cap pulled down low over his eyes, so Drew couldn’t get a good look at his face. But he could see just enough to tell he was a light-skinned brother—not as light as me, Drew thought—out here on the half-court that nobody ever used at Morrison Park, not during the day, certainly not at night, not when there was a lighted full court for you to use at Morrison. This one here was lit only by the moon, up high in the sky tonight.
Usually Drew Robinson—known as True Robinson by now to everybody who followed basketball—didn’t see anybody using either of Morrison’s courts when he arrived after midnight. Whether the courts were lighted up or not.
There was nothing fancy about this park. If you were a good player looking for a game, you went to Shoup Park over in Woodland Hills. Drew just liked the full court at Morrison, liked being able to walk the couple of blocks here from home, knowing he could work out in peace, work on his game, without everybody watching every move he made.
Watching him the way they had been for a while now, even before he and his mom moved out to Southern California, from the time back in New York, when they’d first started calling him
the best point-guard prospect since—pick a name—Chris Paul or Derrick Rose or John Wall. All the new ones that had come along since they used to say Jason Kidd was the best pure point to ever come along.
Even Stephen Curry, one of Drew’s favorites, who came out of Davidson as a shooter and then showed the NBA the way he could pass the ball.
LeBron Junior, some people even called Drew that, not because of the way he played or looked—he was half a foot shorter than the real LeBron—but because he’d made that kind of name for himself before he was even a junior in high school.
Truth was, he played more like Steph Curry, and looked like him even more.
Drew (True) Robinson and his mom lived here in Agoura Hills, just over the line from Westlake Village, where his school—Oakley Academy—was. Quiet town, at least as far as he was concerned, with this quiet playground in it. He could come here when Morrison had emptied out and remember, every single time, why he’d loved playing ball so much in the first place.
Before it became a ticket to dreams he didn’t even know he had.
A basketball friend of his from New York, from 182nd and Crotona in the Bronx, Shamel Williams, a boy with no parents and no money, barely getting by on his grandma’s welfare check, had told Drew once that the best thing about basketball, the thing he loved about it the most, was that it could even make him forget he was hungry sometimes.
“Playing ball just fills me up in another way,” Shamel said. “You know what I mean?”
Drew had never gone hungry. His mom had always been a professional woman; her last job in New York was working as a secretary at a real-estate company in Forest Hills. There’d always been food on the table.
Still, Drew knew what Shamel was saying to him.
Basketball had always filled him up, too.
Morrison gave him that feeling when he had the place to himself. Only tonight he was sharing the place with this ghost player, the ghost doing things on this bad court that made Drew think he
was in some kind of dream.
Dribbling the ball like a Harlem Globetrotter, like Curly Neal, who Drew had met at Madison Square Garden one time, like the ball was on some kind of string. High dribbles to low, both hands—Drew wasn’t even sure at first whether he was righty or lefty—behind his back, through his legs. He was making it look easy, like he wasn’t even paying attention, like he could’ve been doing something else at the same time, checking his phone or texting on it.
Then off the dribble came the spin moves and shots, the guy working the outside, draining shots that would have been three-pointers easy if there had been a three-point line on this old used-up
court instead of just potholes and weeds.
And the guy—ghost—hardly ever missed, even though there were these moves he made, ones that started with his back to the basket, moves like a blur that should have made it impossible for
him to pick up where the rim was when he came out of them.
Here under the light of the moon.
Unreal, Drew thought.
Because how could it be anything else?
Drew saw all this without being seen himself. He was hidden by a palm tree, his own ball resting on his hip.
He watched the guy walk to the far edge of the concrete, as far away from the basket as he could get, take a deep breath, let it out, then glide toward the hoop, long legs eating up the distance.
Then he was in the air, somehow exploding in slow motion, like it wasn’t just the kicks he was wearing, like he was Air Jordan himself, the ball high in his right hand until he threw it down from so far above the rim it was as if he had fallen out of the sky.
Catching the ball with his left on his way down before it even hit the ground.
He wasn’t done.
He bounced the ball to himself, high as he could, elevated, caught the ball as he started to come down. Only he didn’t throw it down right away. Instead he tucked it into his belly like he was a running back in football, somehow stayed in the air as he went underneath the iron, then reverse-slammed it home.
Ten, Drew thought.
Perfect dag-gone ten.
Who was he?
This ghost who seemed as happy to have Morrison to himself as Drew always did.
Only tonight neither one of them was alone.
And even though Drew knew he should be moving on, getting on with his own business, he couldn’t stop watching the show.
Drew thought, I’m watching him do things with a ball that only I’m supposed to do around here.
Not so much the dunking things, even though Drew could definitely throw down with fl air when he wanted to. No. It was the shooting, the ballhandling, like the ball was one more part of this guy, same as his arms and legs.
Drew watched now as the guy dribbled away from the basket, like he was on his way into the trees himself. Then he gave one quick look over his shoulder before casually tossing the ball up
over his head, a crazy no-look shot that floated through the night and hit nothing but net. Even the forgotten courts at Morrison had nets.
Drew couldn’t help himself, couldn’t restrain himself any longer.
He started clapping, like he was at some kind of outdoor concert.
“Man,” Drew said, laughing, “I got to get some of this.”
Then he said, “You want some company?”
Half thinking to himself that if the guy turned around as Drew stepped out from behind the tree, an old hooper like this, he might recognize Drew, might see that the voice calling out to him belonged to True Robinson.
Himself.
The guy didn’t turn around.
He just ran.
Didn’t want to know who was talking to him, didn’t care, just ran and picked up his ball like it was the most valuable possession he had in the world and disappeared into the night.
“Wait!” Drew yelled after him. His voice sounded as loud as thunder.
But just like that, the guy was gone.
As if he’d never been there at all.
Excerpted from True Legend by Mike Lupica
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
#1 New York Times bestseller Mike Lupica makes his return to the basketball court!
There's a reason teammates call him "True." Because for basketball phenom Drew Robinson, there is nothing more true than his talent on the court. It's the kind that comes along once in a generation and is loaded with perks--and with problems. Before long, True buys in to his own hype, much to the chagrin of his mother, who wants to keep her boy's head grounded--and suddenly trouble has a way of finding him. That is, until a washed-up former playground legend steps back onto the court and takes True under his wing.