The Assist: Hoops, Hope, and the Game of Their Lives

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Overview

Jack O'Brien, the impossibly demanding basketball coach at Charlestown High School in Boston, has led his team to five state championship titles in six years. Less talked about is O'Brien's other winning record: Nearly every one of the players who stuck with his program—poor kids growing up in high-crime neighborhoods and saddled with the lousy educational system available in urban America—managed to get to college. But O'Brien is no saint. Saints give without expecting anything in return. O'Brien needs his players and their problems as much as they need him.

Revolving around fascinating, complex characters, The Assist is a captivating narrative of a basketball team in pursuit of a championship that also drills down into the legacy of desegregation and explores issues of education, family, and race. O'Brien is a middle-aged white guy coaching an all-black team playing in an all-white neighborhood that three decades ago was at the center of the busing wars dividing cities across the country—a time and place indelibly described in J. Anthony Lukas's powerful book Common Ground. It's the inspiring story of a man who makes a difference, and of boys surmounting nearly impossible odds; it is also the story of the ones who don't make it, and why.

Editorial Reviews

Adrian Wojnarowki's Yahoo! Sports Column
This isn't a great basketball book, this is great literature.
Booklist
This account of Boston boys' basketball powerhouse Charlestown High School inevitably recalls the seminal book and movie Hoop Dreams, since all three follow the challenges of at-risk, inner-city black players to succeed in high-school basketball and beyond. But if Boston Globe reporter Swidey references the general theme of Hoop Dreams, his focus is less on players and more on the school's longtime coach, Jack O'Brien, whose teams have been perennial state champs and whose players, many from highly dysfunctional homes, customarily move on to college. Swidey follows O'Brien's 2004-05 Charlestown season in detail, seamlessly working in key players, parents, school officials, even opposing coaches and their teams. Interestingly, he doesn't end with the team's season ending championship but rather records the prosaic aftermath. As heroic as O'Brien is in transforming his young men into champions, Swidey shows him to be all too human in his failings. Like Hoop Dreams, this captivating account transcends its time and place.
—Alan Moores
Entertainment Weekly
There's triumph, tragedy, and salvation in this story. Not to mention a movie.
New York Post
There are elements of "The Assist," that are irresistible to Hollywood. If you can't read the book, wait for the movie.
Rocky Mountain News
This is a surprising and fascinating story of how inner-city basketball players outdistance the daily influences trying to pull them down. Only one word can describe such a feat: remarkable.
Publishers Weekly

In this engaging book about Boston's Charlestown High School basketball team, Swidey, a staff writer for the Boston Globe Magazine, explains that "[b]eing part of the Charlestown program was no guarantee that a kid would become a success.... But dropping out of the program dramatically increased the odds that he wouldn't." Head coach Jack O'Brien benefited from the team aside from its gaudy won-loss record. Unmarried and with a shattered family history, O'Brien found that the "rigid team structure... offer[ed] the trappings of home." Like a concerned parent, O'Brien worked year-round to keep his kids away from the overwhelming daily wave of crime and bad influences and into the security of a college-educated future. Swidey masterfully shows over the course of two seasons the struggle O'Brien and his players face in maintaining success on and off the court. The coach observes the lives of his two star players, Ridley Johnson and Jason "Hood" White, go in very different directions after they land out-of-state college scholarships. Swidey expertly examines the slippery slope of Charlestown's success, tying it into Boston's disastrous busing scandal and an underwhelming legal system that perpetuates crime, while he builds narrative momentum and details his subjects with the touch of a skilled novelist. This is a prodigiously reported, compulsively readable book that readers (sport fans or not) will savor. (Jan.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information
School Library Journal

Adult/High School -Jack Oa€™Brien expects success in his players, on the basketball court and off. His program at Charlestown High School, Boston, has achieved that goal, winning four state championships and, more impressively, sending a large percentage of players on to colleges-Division I, II, and III. The program is not without its problems and controversies, however; Oa€™Briena€™s single-minded dedication alienates some players, and working with boys from the citya€™s projects is difficult. Swidey avoids the trap of so many others following in the footsteps of H. G. Bissengera€™s Friday Night Lights (De Capo, 2000): he manages to avoid inserting himself into the story of Charlestowna€™s season. He is both complimentary and subtly critical of Oa€™Briena€™s methods. He recognizes the boysa€™ basketball limitations, is critical of Bostona€™s racial past and disastrous bussing policies, and admires the schoola€™s headmaster. The author doesna€™t spend much time on the actual games; the book is more an examination of the forces that drive Oa€™Brien and his players, the sociology of public education in Boston, and the forces of life on the streets. This is a fine piece of journalistic literature; do not make the mistake of thinking it is for sports fans only.-Mary Ann Harlan, Arcata High School, CA

Kirkus Reviews
Friday Night Lights meets Boyz n the Hood on the mean streets of Boston. Obsessive basketball coach Jack O'Brien was a beloved mainstay at Charlestown High School, leading its team to multiple championships. What made his accomplishments so impressive was the fact that his team was comprised of young men from the projects who were bussed into school. During the 2004-05 season documented here, Charlestown was led by Jason "Hood" White, a cornrowed guard who, when he was three, was run over and almost killed by a crackhead on her way to get a fix. As important as it was for O'Brien to take another title, it was just as vital that his players get into college or, at the very least, survive the streets. If that meant helping Hood navigate his way through the Massachusetts court system, so be it. Award-winning Boston Globe Magazine staff writer Swidey comes from a hard-news background, which proves a double-edged sword in executing this hoops-in-the-hood book. His straight journalistic chops infuse the legal proceedings and the player profiles with a higher-than-expected level of gravitas, but his depictions of the games are less than gripping. Since basketball was the primary raison d'etre for O'Brien and his brood, the lack of fire in the sports reporting diminishes its significance. (Swidey could take some lessons in suspense from Jack McCallum's Seven Seconds or Less, 2006.) Perhaps the author seeks to emphasize that basketball should enhance people's lives, not overwhelm them-a fair sentiment, but it doesn't make for the kind of book that will resonate beyond a niche audience. A noble debut with its heart in the right place, but lacking the substance of its spiritual cousin, Hoop Dreams.Agent: Sarah Chalfant/Wylie Agency

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781586486662
  • Publisher: PublicAffairs
  • Publication date: 11/10/2008
  • Edition description: Reprint
  • Pages: 392
  • Sales rank: 264,887
  • Lexile: 1080L (what's this?)
  • Product dimensions: 5.50 (w) x 8.20 (h) x 1.10 (d)

Meet the Author

Neil Swidey is a staff writer for The Boston Globe Magazine. His writing has won the National Headliner Award and has been anthologized in The Best American Science Writing and The Best American Crime Writing. He lives outside Boston with his wife and their three daughters.

Table of Contents


Prologue     1
The Pre-Season     7
Hood     9
Ridley     29
The Rules of the Road     45
O'Brien     57
The Season     71
Fits and Starts     73
A Taste of the High Life     85
Townies in Black and White     97
Rematch     115
Fathers, Sons, and Surrogates     129
The Post-Season     153
The Cities     155
Survive and Advance     165
Playoffs and Payoffs     183
Mind Over Matter     197
The Off-Season     209
Crime's Call     211
No Ordinary Summer     223
End Game     235
The Unraveling     237
The Tipping Point     257
The Decision     269
Blind Justice     283
Revise and Revoke     313
Epilogue     339
Research Methods     347
Acknowledgments     353

Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4.5
( 9 )

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Sort by: Showing all of 9 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted September 12, 2008

    Great Read

    ¿The Assist¿, by Neil Swidey is a great book about basketball, race, and loyalty. It combines all of these factors and meshes into a great novel that inspires one to dream. Dreaming is a big part of the kids lives at Charlestown High School because many of these kids are from inner city Boston and do not have much to do but to dream and play basketball. ¿The Assist¿ shows how one man can make a positive impact on many young's men's lives and teaches them to dream and believe that anything is possible. Charlestown High School is in a predominately white section on the outskirts of Boston. The high school has became much more diverse in recent years and a big part of that is because of basketball coach, Jack O'Brien. O'Brien has turned Charlestown into a basketball powerhouse by making great relationships with families in inner city Boston. He is different then other coaches and that shows because many of his players make the trek across Boston every morning to come to Charlestown. O'Brien is a different coach then most because he loves basketball but he prepares his players for life after basketball. He puts them in situations to become successful on the court and off the court. His best players, Jason ¿Hood¿ White and Ridley Johnson, are a great example of that because Jason, Ridley, and O'Brien go through a lot together and through it all O'Brien is there. O'Brien, the main character, and his two best players Jason White and Ridley Johnson are the integral part of this memorable book. They go through the good times such as winning four consecutive state championships or getting scholarships to play college basketball and the rough times, for example when Jason is arrested on gun charges and Ridley has the difficult decision of leaving home for college. Follow O'Brien, White, and Johnson as they ride the wave of life and experience the highs and lows of growing up. Sports fans or just readers in general this book is made for you. This book is not just a basketball book but it is a life lesson as it shows a man changing the lives of young men who have grown up without fathers or other important parts of life. This is a must read book because it will change your life and make you appreciate everything happy and important to you.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted March 5, 2008

    So-so, but could have been great

    Swidey's The Assist is a good read that could have been great if the author had been much less heavy-handed with the condescending class-warfare commentary. Empathy for the kids and people of a struggling inner-city community did not have to equate stereotyping of those who were/are better off. Sadly, Swidey continued in this tired vein throughout the entirety of what could have been a great sports novel.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted August 30, 2010

    awesome book

    I choose to read this book for my summer reading. I am a basketball fan and i thought this book was excellent. It teaches the players on how to act in and out of school, pass all there classes, and dont pick on people because of there race.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 13, 2008

    Great story

    Informative, realistic, and compelling. Really made you feel like you were a part of the team. Very happy I bought this book.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 13, 2008

    A reviewer

    Book about White-Irish-Catholic coach working with tough inner-city Black kids. It's a nice read, if your a basketball fan especially.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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