cover image Boys Among Men

Boys Among Men

Jonathan Abrams. Crown Archetype, $28 (336p) ISBN 978-0-8041-3925-0

Kevin Garnett and Kobe Bryant’s direct ascension from high school seniors to NBA rookies was considered unusual when the Minnesota Timberwolves and Charlotte Hornets drafted the phenoms in 1995 and 1996, respectively. By 2004, with Garnett and Bryant now superstars, the NBA draft’s first 19 selections featured eight right out of high school. The new rage irked then NBA commissioner David Stern, who worked to have draftees be a year removed from high school before going pro. In this excellent effort, Abrams, the gifted hoops writer late of Grantland, examines this controversial phenomenon from every angle. He talks to various basketball insiders, most notably the image-conscious Stern (who deemed pro scouts in high school gyms “unseemly”). He recounts success stories like Jermaine O’Neal (an eloquent opponent of the current restrictions) and busts like Lenny Cooke. Abrams also uncovers some great anecdotes, such as how Bryant eventually landed at the venerable Los Angeles Lakers by simply not working out for some interested teams. (The New Jersey Nets’ trademark incompetence also helped.) With lean, detailed prose and lots of reporting, Abrams shows that teenagers who approached this adult opportunity as a job, not as a right, thrived. (Mar.)