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When high school basketball player LeBron James was selected as the top pick in the National Basketball Association
draft of 2003, the hopes of a half-million high school basketball players soared. If LeBron could go straight from
high school to the NBA, why couldn't they? Such is the allure of basketball for so many young African American
men. Unfortunately, the reality is that their chances of ever playing basketball at the professional, or even college,
level are infinitesimal. In Living Through the Hoop, Reuben A. Buford May tells the absorbing story of the hopes
and struggles of one high school basketball team.
With a clear passion for the game, May grabs readers with both hands and pulls them onto the hardwood, going under
the hoop and inside the locker room. May spent seven seasons as an assistant coach of the Northeast High School
Knights in Northeast, Georgia. We meet players like Larique and Pooty Cat, hard-working and energetic young men,
willing to play and practice basketball seven days a week and banking on the unlimited promise of the game. And
we meet Coach Benson, their unorthodox, out-spoken, and fierce leader, who regularly coached them to winning seasons,
twice going to the state tournaments Elite Eight championships.
Beyond the wins and losses, May provides a portrait of the players' hopes and aspirations, their home lives, and
the difficulties they face in living in a poor and urban area � namely, the temptations of drugs and alcohol, violence
in their communities, run-ins with the police, and unstable family lives. We learn what it means to become a man
when you live in places that definemanhood by how tough you can be, how many women you can have, and how much money
you can hustle.
May shows the powerful role that the basketball team can play in keeping these kids straight, away from street-life,
focused on completing high school, and possibly even attending college. Their stories, and the double-edged sword
of hoop dreams, is at the heart of this compelling story about young African American men's struggle to find their
way in an often grim world.