Shooting
Stars
Click to
order via Amazon
by
LeBron James and Buzz Bissinger
Hardcover: 272 pages
Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The (September 8, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 159420232X
ISBN-13: 978-1594202322
Book Review by
Kam Williams
“I was born in December 1984 in a house on Hickory St.
that was mostly maintained by my mother’s mother. But when I
was three, my grandmother died early Christmas morning of a
massive heart attack… The house became harder and harder to
keep up.
My mom was working anywhere and everywhere to somehow
make ends meet. The house needed work. Work on an old house
takes money, and we didn’t have money. Eventually, the city
came in, served several eviction notices, and ultimately
condemned it and bulldozed it to the ground. Then the moves
started…
All I really cared about when I was growing up [was]
knowing that my mom was still alive and still by my side. I
already didn’t have a father and… all I could do was hope
and pray that she was safe, because I knew she was trying to
do the best for me that she could. And she always came
back.”
—Excerpted from Chapter Two (pages 11-13)
In May of this year,
LeBron James, became the youngest NBA
player to be named the league’s MVP. This was just the latest in
a long line of accolades showered on the talented superstar for
his on-court achievements since he first appeared on the cover
of Sports Illustrated while still in high school.
Today, he is the sixth-highest paid athlete in the world,
behind only Tiger Woods, Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan, David
Beckham and Kimi Raikkonen, whoever that is. Between his salary
from the Cleveland Cavaliers and his lucrative endorsements
deals with the likes of Nike, Sprite and Bubblicious LeBron is
slated to rake in $40 million in 2009, meaning he will have made
a total of over $200 million before turning 25.
Given his phenomenal success, it would be easy to understand
if “King James” had a swelled head and forget where came from.
But this simply isn’t the case, as is amply illustrated in
Shooting Stars, a poignant memoir chronicling his formative
years and coming of age in Akron, Ohio. But rather than focus
merely on himself, LeBron saw fit to give his pals Willie McGee,
Dru Joyce, Sian Cotton and Romeo Travis equal time as subjects
of the book as well.
Their enduring friendship was forged at the tender age of ten
as members of a travelling youth team called the Shooting Stars.
And each one’s very challenging childhood is recounted in vivid
detail, such as Willie’s being raised by his big brother because
his parents were both drug addicts. Credit Pulitzer Prize-winner
Buzz Bissinger for cobbling their stories into a thrilling,
overcoming the odds tale proving the power of loyalty and
perseverance in pursuit of high school hoop dreams.
A compelling autobiography illustrating the evolution of
LeBron into a selfless role model worthy of emulation.
Related Links
LeBron James - The “More Than a Game” Interview
http://reviews.aalbc.com/lebron_james.htm