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Game

Summary: If Harlem high school senior Drew Lawson is going to realize his dream of playing college, then professional, basketball, he will have to improve at being coached and being a team player, especially after a new--white--student threatens to take the scouts' attention away from him.

Record details

  • ISBN: 0061783552 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket Reader)
  • ISBN: 9780061783555 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket Reader)
  • ISBN: 0060582960 (electronic bk. : Adobe Digital Editions)
  • ISBN: 9780060582968 (electronic bk. : Adobe Digital Editions)
  • Physical Description: remote
    electronic resource
  • Publisher: Pymble, NSW ; New York, NY : HarperCollins e-books, 2009.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Title from eBook information screen.
Target Audience Note:
Grades 7 up.
System Details Note:
Requires Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 1416 KB) or Mobipocket Reader (file size: 177 KB).
Awards Note:
A Junior Library Guild selection
Genre: Electronic books.
Young adult fiction.

Electronic resources


  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2008 February

    Gr 9 Up— In this story of a teen who dreams of making it big in the NBA, Myers returns to the theme that has dominated much of his serious fiction: How can young black urban males negotiate the often-harsh landscape of their lives to establish a sense of identity and self-worth? Drew Lawson is a very good high school player who is staking his future on the wildly improbable chance that he will achieve professional stardom. He is not an outstanding student, and he feels that basketball is the only thing that lifts him above the ranks of the ordinary. As he surveys his Harlem neighborhood, he worries that if he does not succeed in sports, he will become like so many other young men he sees around him who continue to talk tough, but have stopped believing in themselves, and are betrayed by "the weakness in their eyes." Harlem itself is a looming presence in the novel: vibrant, exciting, dirty, dangerous, it is the only home that Drew has ever known and to a large extent it both defines and limits his outlook. Being no more or less insightful or articulate (or self-absorbed) than most 17-year-olds, he fails to connect with those adults who have overcome racism, bad luck, and their own missteps to find alternative ways to succeed. As always, Myers eschews easy answers, and readers are left with the question of whether or not Drew is prepared to deal with the challenges that life will inevitably hand him.—Richard Luzer, Fair Haven Union High School, VT

    [Page 122]. Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

Additional Resources