Kendrick Perkins provides an education
Review of đThe Education of Kendrick Perkins: A Memoir (out on 21 Feb)
Hello! Apologies for the lack of newsletters the past few weeks - travel, family and illness got in the way unfortunately. I have a few reviews lined up in the next week or two so keep an eye on the twitter feed for those.
This week I take a look at the upcoming memoir from former NBA player and current ESPN analyst Kendrick Perkins. Itâs a pretty powerful book reflecting as much on his experience of being a Black man in America as it does on Perkinsâ NBA career. It will definitely resonate with a lot of people. As usual, I have the list of recent and upcoming releases towards the end of the newsletter too.
đ The Education of Kendrick Perkins: A Memoir by Kendrick Perkins with Seth Rogoff (published on 21 February)
I donât watch sports talk shows and have never seen Perkins in his post career role as an opiniated ESPN talking head. I picked up The Education of Kendrick Perkins expecting to read the memoir of a player who won the NBA championship with the âBig Threeâ in Boston and was at OKC Thunder at a pretty interesting time during the Durant/Westbrook era (as chronicled wonderfully in the fantastic Boom Town book). Instead I found myself reflecting on much broader, often uncomfortable, questions about American society and how history shapes the lived experience of Black Americans today.
While we all know not to judge a book by its cover, I definitely judge books by their titles. As a title, The Education of Kendrick Perkins promises something deeper than a standard retelling of an athletic career - and the promise is more than delivered open. The book opens with one of the strongest opening chapters I have ever read - as Perkins is travelling to his new life in the NBA he reflects on the experiences that have led him to that point and his expectations for the future. Itâs a great framing device but mainly an exceptionally well written chapter that captures a young man at a pivotal point and introduces the reader to who he is at that point in his life and the influences that have shaped him.
Chapters alternate between a conventional, but very interesting, retelling of Perkins career and a broader discussion of the experience of Black Americans and the impact that history has on the present day. Similar to Howard Bryantâs excellent Rickey, it discusses the legacy of the Great Migration post Civil War and the resettlement of Black Americans across the USA. Subsequent chapters build on this history using this knowledge to put modern events in a broader historical context.
The discussion on fatherhood really stands out as the most powerful and eye-opening part of the book. Perkins reflects on the fact that so few NBA players grow up knowing their fathers and highlights the need to center the public narrative on absent fathers as part of broader societal issues rather than being a standalone issue often used to chastise Black men. It is as interesting and well reasoned a piece of social commentary Iâve read in a long time and not what you expect to find in a typical NBA players autobiography!
From a purely sporting perspective, itâs a quality autobiography of a player who had a successful NBA career without being a superstar. Perkins talent and hard work saw him become a popular choice as a ânormalâ player on a superstar team which led him to play alongside many of the eraâs best players. The main takeaway is the sheer scale of the challenge of moving from being a talented young player to playing alongside and against established stars while adjusting to a very different way of life.
Ultimately The Education of Kendrick Perkins strikes a nice balance between being an interesting sports book and being a broader call-to-action on issues involving racial and social justice. Perkins couldnât have fully written about his life without reflecting on these broader themes - but the depth of his consideration and the clarity of his thinking is what really makes this book stand out.
Sports books out now or coming very soon:
đ„ Brick City Grudge Match: Tony Zale and Rocky Graziano Battle in Newark, 1948 by Rod Honecker
đ„A Boxing Legacy: The Life and Works of Writer and Cartoonist Ted Carroll edited by Ian Phimister and David Patrick
✠Duncan Edwards: Eternal: The family authorised autobiography of Manchester United's lost genius by Wayne Barton. Barton has written tons of great books on Unitedâs past and this promises to be a great read.
âœForgotten Football Clubs: Fifty Teams Across the World, Gone but Never Forgotten by Philip O'Rourke
âœGlory, Glory, Gone: The Story of Tottenham Hotspur's Regression, Relegation and Rebirth in the 1970s by Samuel Rooke
✠Spice Up Your Life: Liverpool, the Nineties and Roy Evans by Jonathon Aspey
✠Pantomime Hero: Jimmy Armfield - Memories of the Man Who Lifted Leeds United After Brian Clough by Ian Ridley
✠Brave Enough Not to Quit by Millie Farrow with Katie Field.
⟠Winning Fixes Everything : How Baseball's Brightest Minds Created Sports' Biggest Mess by Evan Drellich
When Women Stood: The Untold History of Females Who Changed Sports and the World by Alexandra Allred
The Black Athlete Revolt: The Sport Justice Movement in the Age of #BlackLivesMatter by Shaun M. Anderson
Black Mercuries: African American Athletes, Race, and the Modern Olympic Games by David K. Wiggins, Kevin B. Witherspoon & Mark Dyreson
Thanks for reading. Let me know your thoughts, opinions, any improvements I can make etc. Catch me on Twitter. More books next week!