Lost in the Game
A Book about Basketball
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $22.99
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
For players, coaches, writers, and fans, basketball is a science and an art, a religious sacrament, a source of entertainment, and a way of interacting with the world. In Lost in the Game Thomas Beller entwines these threads with his lifetime’s experience as a player and journalist, roaming NBA locker rooms and city parks as a basketball flaneur in search of the meaning of the modern game. He captures the magnificence and mastery of today’s most accomplished NBA players while paying homage to the devotion of countless congregants in the global church of pickup basketball. He shares his own stories from the courts, meditating on basketball’s role in city life and its impact on the athlete’s psyche as he moves from youth to middle age. Part journalistic account, part memoir of a slightly talented player whose main gift is being tall, Lost in the Game charts the game’s inexorable gravitational hold on those who love it.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Basketball is a special sport because "in the act of playing you forget where you are," writes English professor Beller (J.D. Salinger: The Escape Artist) in this heartfelt ode to the game. Beller recounts his own collegiate basketball career and discusses the culture of New York City playground basketball (it's the "primal scene" of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's "basketball initiation and education"), the agony of being a Knicks fan (it teaches "a certain emotional reserve, lest you get burned again"), the formidable Golden State Warriors ("The whole players-on-string, cut-and-move system... created a beautiful game to watch"), and the dawn of the superstar era (LeBron James's 2010 announcement that he was "going to take talents to South Beach" signaled a sea change for big-name players, who became "their own team builders," Beller writes). Beller champions the sport as a lens through which to view life, and his devotion to it is palpable throughout: "I enter the world of the playground and pickup ball with the sense of relief and enclosure with which I once entered bars." Basketball aficionados will get swept up in this incisive study.