One Goal: A Coach, a Team, and the Game That Brought a Divided Town Together

One Goal: A Coach, a Team, and the Game That Brought a Divided Town Together

by Amy Bass

Narrated by Will Collyer, Amy Bass

Unabridged — 10 hours, 41 minutes

One Goal: A Coach, a Team, and the Game That Brought a Divided Town Together

One Goal: A Coach, a Team, and the Game That Brought a Divided Town Together

by Amy Bass

Narrated by Will Collyer, Amy Bass

Unabridged — 10 hours, 41 minutes

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Overview

In the tradition of Friday Night Lights and Outcasts United, One Goal tells the inspiring story of the soccer team in a town bristling with racial tension that united Somali refugees and multi-generation Mainers in their quest for state -- and ultimately national -- glory.

When thousands of Somali refugees resettled in Lewiston, Maine, a struggling, overwhelmingly white town, longtime residents grew uneasy. Then the mayor wrote a letter asking Somalis to stop coming, which became a national story. While scandal threatened to subsume the town, its high school's soccer coach integrated Somali kids onto his team, and their passion began to heal old wounds. Taking readers behind the tumult of this controversial team -- and onto the pitch where the teammates vied to become state champions and achieved a vital sense of understanding -- One Goal is a timely story about overcoming the prejudices that divide us.

Editorial Reviews

MAY 2018 - AudioFile

Amy Bass’s deep dive into Lewiston, Maine’s high school soccer team is about more than sports. It’s about immigration and acceptance. The author examines the wave of Somali immigrants that hit this small city in the early 2000s, focusing on the boys who join the soccer team. As they experience outright racism, the refugees bond with the local players through the leadership of the team’s longtime coach. Narrator Will Collyer had a choice: He could read this audiobook straight or create voices for the players, coaches, and others whom the author cites. He chose the latter, and it brings the production alive. Treating everyone with dignity, he uses a slight New England accent when appropriate and creates inquisitive lilts for the Somali players. Both author and narrator take a “Friday Night Lights” approach to looking at the team, the city, and its residents through both sociological and sports lenses. The story culminates with an exciting state playoff run. M.B. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

11/27/2017
One of the whitest states in the U.S. also boasts one of the country’s most ethnically diverse high school soccer programs, explains Bass (Those About Him Remained Silent) in this relevant and rewarding narrative. Bass followed the Lewiston High School Blue Devils and the team’s tireless coach, Mike McGraw, during its 2015 pursuit of a state title. In the early 2000s, Lewiston, Maine, emerged as a popular destination for Somali refugee families due to the city’s low crime rate, cheap housing, and solid schools. The Somalis had an impact on life in Lewiston (sambusa, a savory Somali puff pastry, is served by snack bars at games alongside hot dogs), but, as Bass reports, the wider community was slow to accept the Somali population. Bass immersed herself in the town’s culture and got to know players and families both black and white—as well as the prejudiced Lewiston residents who told Somali families to “go back to Africa.” McGraw emerges as the book’s true hero, a man able to put aside his own preconceptions about Muslims for the good of his players. He, along with the Lewiston High School boys’ soccer team, eventually bridged a divided community on their way to winning the finals. Bass’s effective portrayal of Lewiston as a microcosm of America’s changing culture should be required reading for coaches, teachers, and those working with diverse populations. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

"The perfect parable for our time."—Jane Leavy, The Wall Street Journal

"A magnificent and significant book about soccer in the United States...at once a stark look at the lives of the Somali refugees and a serious study of why soccer matters as a link between disparate cultures and peoples....Some of the vignettes of life for these refugees are as unforgettable as any heart-stopping game."—The Globe & Mail

"Amy Bass tells a story that encompasses many of the things people love about sports, but also epitomizes many of the reasons sports matter."—Bob Costas

"In this noisy era of glib hot-takes and childish finger-pointing, it's too easy to forget that the national character—hardworking, immigrant-fueled, optimistic—was built from the bottom up. Let Amy Bass remind you. Let her take you to our frosty upper righthand corner, to Lewiston, Maine, where quiet heroes like Mike McGraw, Abdi H. and the magical Blue Devils show again just how it's done. This is not just a great story, deftly reported and unflinchingly told. It's not just a story of one obscure high school season. It's the American story, just when you feared that it might be fading fast, renewed."—S.L. Price, Sports Illustrated Senior Writer and author of PlayingThrough The Whistle: Steel, Football and an American Town

"A lively, informative, and entertaining...underdog story that skillfully blends elements of human compassion, passion for a sport, determination, and endurance with overtones of societal pressure and racism. It's an exhilarating narrative that shows how perseverance and the ability to disregard the narrow-mindedness of xenophobia can lead to victory....An edifying and adrenaline-charged tale."—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"At a time when America seems consumed by divisiveness and hate, along comes One Goal, a beautiful and important reminder that humanity's strength is its togetherness. Yes, on the surface this is a soccer book. But Amy Bass' work is so much more. It's about overcoming odds, about embracing differences, about the triumph of will and spirit. A true gem of a book."—Jeff Pearlman, New York Times bestselling author of The Bad Guys Won and Gunslinger

"A story that is not only relevant to our national discourse, but essential. This is a book about the big 'isms,' but it is most of all a book about human beings, compellingly and movingly rendered."
Jeremy Schaap, New York Times bestselling author of Cinderella Man

"A touching work showing how different groups can come together through sports"—Library Journal, Best Books of the Year

"In this gripping account of Lewiston's journey to its first-ever high-school soccer state championship, history professor Bass vividly tells the stories of the Somalis and Lewiston, exploring the resistance and racism the refugees faced in town and on the field....a heartening example of sport's ability to bring people together...Engrossing and informative."
Booklist

"One Goal has made me feel optimistic about the country I live in. The vibrant, colorful and courageous characters will make you smile. The coach of the Blue Devils, Mike McGraw, is the kind of man you wish your own kids could learn from- and he teaches a lot more than soccer. One Goal is about so much more than sports. It illustrates how powerful and transcendent teamwork and community can be."—Mary Carillo, analyst, NBC Sports

"Amy Bass's book transcends sports and provides encouragement in discouraging times."
Bill Littlefield, Boston Globe, Best Books of the Year

"Wondrous....The players' humble triumphs remind us that no win is too small....One Goal illustrates how sport changed the history of a small town in Maine and connected so many people. It's a relevant tale in today's political climate, where fear and bigotry can be conquered by inclusion, understanding, and the beautiful game."—ShireenAhmed, co-host of the Burn It All Down podcast

"[A] relevant and rewarding narrative... Bass's effective portrayal of Lewiston as a microcosm of America's changing culture should be required reading."—Publishers Weekly

"We can use more books that make us feel good about being Americans. This one does that."—Lee Miller, The Boston Globe

"Bass captures the essence of this unlikely band of brothers perfectly. This isn't a story about a soccer team....More than anything, this is a story of hope. The hope that brought thousands of Africans to a remote corner of the America in search of a better life. The hope that made a city finally open its arms to the children of those immigrants. The hope that our future still might be better than our past."—Tom Caron, anchor, New England Sports Network

"One Goal is Friday Night Lights for the twenty-first century."—Brian Phillips, author of Impossible Owls

"The inspirational story of how Somali refugees and native-born white kids in Lewiston, Maine, banded together to win a state championship, helping bridge racial and cultural divides...Bass broadens the story to show how it fits into the story of immigration, racism, Islamaphobia and economic decline in rust belt American towns."—The Hollywood Reporter

MAY 2018 - AudioFile

Amy Bass’s deep dive into Lewiston, Maine’s high school soccer team is about more than sports. It’s about immigration and acceptance. The author examines the wave of Somali immigrants that hit this small city in the early 2000s, focusing on the boys who join the soccer team. As they experience outright racism, the refugees bond with the local players through the leadership of the team’s longtime coach. Narrator Will Collyer had a choice: He could read this audiobook straight or create voices for the players, coaches, and others whom the author cites. He chose the latter, and it brings the production alive. Treating everyone with dignity, he uses a slight New England accent when appropriate and creates inquisitive lilts for the Somali players. Both author and narrator take a “Friday Night Lights” approach to looking at the team, the city, and its residents through both sociological and sports lenses. The story culminates with an exciting state playoff run. M.B. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2017-11-12
United by a common dream, high school soccer players overcome racism in a town in Maine.Lewiston was once a nearly all-white mill town on the verge of economic collapse. Then hundreds of Somali refugees poured into the city, creating new growth in the community. Despite racial tensions, the Somalians forged ahead, with their youth leading the way on and off the soccer field. With the help of the high school soccer coach and his assistants, the team led the school to its first state championship in 2015. Bass (History/Coll. of New Rochelle) delivers a lively, informative, and entertaining account of the years leading up to the game, and she includes in-depth coverage of the players and their respective refugee stories, the coach and his assistants, and the overall state of racism in Maine and across the U.S. Minute-by-minute descriptions of the games build tension as the team steadily progresses from a devastating defeat to their ultimate victory. The back stories of the Somalian refugees are often heart-rending and brutal, but they also demonstrate an awe-inspiring resilience. The concern of the people of Lewiston who helped integrate the refugees into the community offers hope and guidance to those who also face a steady influx of immigrants. This is a multitiered underdog story that skillfully blends elements of human compassion, passion for a sport, determination, and endurance with overtones of societal pressure and racism. It's an exhilarating narrative that shows how perseverance and the ability to disregard the narrow-mindedness of xenophobia can lead to victory. "The team's success embodies a negotiation between an immigrant community and its chosen home," writes the author, "an often difficult conversation about language, religion, culture, education, and family."An edifying and adrenaline-charged tale of how immigrant soccer players were able to translate "tight-knit family and community connection to success on the field."

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170092161
Publisher: Hachette Audio
Publication date: 02/27/2018
Edition description: Unabridged
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