Review
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"A must-read for hoops fans.... powerful and
heartbreaking." - Slate
"Basketball is developing its own reputation for outstanding
writing--as this sterling "love story" about the game from
MacMullan and Bartholomew attests." - Booklist (starred review)
"With unprecedented access to an unbelievably robust lineup of
players, coaches, executives, journalists and others associated
with the game, the authors bring readers into the action both on
and off the court, rendering the entire history of the game in
easy-to-read bites interspersed with helpful contextual stories
and background information...this is must-read catnip for hoop
heads." - Kirkus (starred review)
"This is a shadow history of how basketball became the game that
it is today -- it's all the details you don't know about the all
the stuff you always thought you understood. Maybe you think you
know everything about Wilt's 100-point game. You don't. Maybe you
think you have a grasp on the ABA and the ACC and the complexity
of institutional racism and Michael Jordan's secret grudge with
George Gervin. You do not. This is not a book for people who just
think basketball is OK. This is a book for people who care." --
Chuck Klosterman, New York Times Bestselling author of I Wear the
Black Hat and But What if We're Wrong?
"The boldface names (Russell, Wilt, West, Jordan, Bird, Magic)
and the boldface events (Celtics dynasty, Showtime, Magic's HIV)
are all here. But what I appreciate most about A Love Story were
the reminiscences about the women's game and especially the
accounts of the racial battles fought by the game's pioneers.
Jackie and Rafe have done a masterful job of historical hoops
excavation." --Jack McCallum, New York Times bestselling author
of Dream Team and Seven Seconds or Less
"What MacMullan and Bartholomew have done here is nothing short
of crafting the definitive history of the sport -- told through
the people who lived it. There has never been a deeper and more
star-studded cast of interviewees about basketball, and the
authors pull unique ins out of them. A wonderful read." -
Zach Lowe, ESPN senior writer and host of the Lowe Post
"The sweet symphony of the game is audible in every page
throughout Basketball: A Love Story. You can hear the sneakers
squeaking and basketballs bouncing off floors and kissing nets.
Through the voices of the game's greatest evolvers, participants
and influencers, Jackie MacMullan and Rafe Bartholomew relay the
rich tapestry of how basketball has genuinely touched all corners
of the globe and all races and creeds." - Jonathan Abrams, New
York Times bestselling author of All The Pieces Matter and Boys
Among Men
"The layers and the details and vivid storytelling in
Basketball: A Love Story makes this a 'must read.' I couldn't put
this book down!" - Doris Burke, winner of the Curt Gowdy Media
Award and member of the Basketball Hall of Fame
About the Author
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JACKIE MACMULLAN is a television analyst for ESPN and
a senior writer for ESPN.com. She has been covering basketball
for more than three decades, beginning at the Boston Globe,
where she was the first female sports columnist in the paper's
history. She covered the National Basketball Association from
1995 to 2000 for Sports Illustrated and has authored four books,
including New York Times bestsellers When the Game Was Ours and
Shaq Uncut. In 2010, MacMullan became the first woman to win the
Curt Gowdy Award by the Basketball Hall of Fame for outstanding
contributions to basketball.
RAFE BARTHOLOMEW is the author of Pacific Rims. His writing has
appeared in Grantland, Slate, the New York Times, Chicago
Reader, Deadspin, and other leading online and print
publications. His stories have twice been honored in the Best
American Sports Writing series.
DAN KLORES has been awarded the Independent Spirit Award for best
director of the year for his classic documentary 'Crazy Love, '
and the Peabody for 'Black Magic.' Four of his films premiered at
the Sundance Film Festival, and he has written for The New York
Times, New York Magazine, Daily News, Esquire, and other
publications. He is the author of Roundball Culture, and three
off-Broadway plays.