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Heaven Is a Playground

door Rick Telander

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Heaven Is a Playground was the first book on the uniquely American phenomenon of urban basketball. Rick Telander, a photojournalist and former high school basketball player, spent part of the summer of 1973 and all of the summer of 1974 in Brooklyn living the playground life with his subjects at Foster Park in Flatbush. He slept on the floor of a park regular's apartment, observing, questioning, traveling, playing with, and eventually coaching a ragtag group of local teenagers whose hopes of better lives were often fanatically attached to the transcendent game itself. Telander introduces us to Fly Williams, a playground legend with incredible leaping ability and self-destructive tendencies that threatened to keep him earthbound. Another standout was Albert King, a fifteen-year-old phenom whose shy, quiet demeanor masked an otherworldly talent that eventually took him to the NBA. This edition also includes Telander's perspectives on the arrival of an NBA team in Brooklyn. Heaven Is a Playground is one of a kind--a funny, sad, ultimately inspiring book about Americans and the roots of the sport that they love.… (meer)
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In his 1974 classic, “Heaven is a Playground,” sports writer Rick Telander leaves a lot of important questions unanswered. For example, if a ghetto playground in Brooklyn is heaven for a basketball aficionado, how much of the playground is heaven and how much is hell for the black youth who seem trapped by its relative safety?

Outside of the playground? Broken glass. Graffiti. Heroine addicts. Deadly street gangs and drug dealers. Profiling cops. A society that serves ghetto youth distain and smells only the oder of failure.

Although the study is of the ghetto in 1974, it is still the world of Rodney King and Trayvon Martin. It is 150 years since Emancipation and still the black man is hunted on the streets of America. The reason why Black Lives Matter. The reason why incarceration rates of blacks are a disgrace.

Why basketball? What is it about this sport that yields so many outstanding athletes among black youth. Or football? Why do participation rates of blacks in pro baseball continue to drop?

I think the case of baseball has something to do with the participation of youth in parts of the world even more desperate than America’s ghettos. The barrio. The Caribbean wasteland. The favela.

Basketball and more particularly football are far more violent sports. The success of underprivileged youth in these sports, in fact the financial success of these sports is predicated upon the failure of youth to enter the mainstream. Pro sports is an indication of just how little America has progressed since Emancipation.

Where are the parents of these kids scrabbling hard to escape the ghetto? Where are the mentors? Where are the teachers? A place as big and sprawling and busy as New York has little time for the “losers” as Donald Trump would call them.

Even while author Rick Telander acknowledges seriousness of the ghetto trap for these youth, the tale is overlaid with some sentimental gauze that the home of basketball is really on these playgrounds. If he is right, then basketball is a mirror of the desperation of blacks to ever achieve equality when the deck is clearly stacked against them.

On a basketball court a boy is challenged by his peers. While not as deadly as a street brawl, it is someplace the boy can test his skill, his imagination, and his manliness. And it is a brutal competition nonetheless. ( )
  MylesKesten | Jan 23, 2024 |
Rick Telander, author and Sun-Times columnist described how Obama saw him in a crowd and called him out as the author of "the best book I've ever read about basketball." Telander wrote that he was "startled and embarrassed" but then realized that Obama found in the book the "historic essence of the game he loved.That I wrote about Brooklyn ballers in the 1970s meant nothing. Obama, of course, saw the universal in the specific."
  pjhogan | Jan 19, 2009 |
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Heaven Is a Playground was the first book on the uniquely American phenomenon of urban basketball. Rick Telander, a photojournalist and former high school basketball player, spent part of the summer of 1973 and all of the summer of 1974 in Brooklyn living the playground life with his subjects at Foster Park in Flatbush. He slept on the floor of a park regular's apartment, observing, questioning, traveling, playing with, and eventually coaching a ragtag group of local teenagers whose hopes of better lives were often fanatically attached to the transcendent game itself. Telander introduces us to Fly Williams, a playground legend with incredible leaping ability and self-destructive tendencies that threatened to keep him earthbound. Another standout was Albert King, a fifteen-year-old phenom whose shy, quiet demeanor masked an otherworldly talent that eventually took him to the NBA. This edition also includes Telander's perspectives on the arrival of an NBA team in Brooklyn. Heaven Is a Playground is one of a kind--a funny, sad, ultimately inspiring book about Americans and the roots of the sport that they love.

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