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Rebound!

Basketball, Busing, Larry Bird, and the Rebirth of Boston

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the mid-1970s, the city of Boston entered a period of upheaval on both its historic cobblestone streets and its legendary parquet basketball court. The Boston Celtics' long dominance of the NBA came to an abrupt end, and the city's image as a hub of social justice was shaken to its core. When the federal courts declared, in 1974, that the city was in violation of school desegregation rulings and would need to institute a busing program, Boston became deeply polarized.

Then, just as the city was struggling to pull itself out of economic and social turmoil, the Boston Celtics drafted a forward from Indiana State named Larry Bird. Upon the arrival of the "Hick from French Lick" to Boston in 1979, the fates of team and city were reborn. Pride, championships, reduced crime, and an economic boom re-emerged in Boston.

In Rebound!, author Michael Connelly chronicles these parallel but intertwining worlds. It is an account of a city in financial, moral, and social decline brought back to life by the re-emergence of the Boston Celtics dynasty and the return of hope, purpose, and pride to "Hub of the Universe." Interviews with city officials, former players, and others on the frontlines provide a fascinating exploration into this tumultuous time.

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    • Booklist

      December 1, 2008
      Bill Russell was the key player on Boston Celtics teams that won 11 championships in 13 years in the 1950s and 1960s. Yet Russell never felt comfortable in Boston, a notoriously segregated and often overtly racist city. In 1974, five years after Russells retirement, the city was forced to embark on a bitterly contested program of bused integration. It was a city divided. And the Celtics fell on hard times. Then Larry Bird, a white forward from southern Indiana, arrived. Black and white Beantown citizens found common ground in their admiration for Birds excellence and, Connelly argues, began to heal. There are two books here: one is a brief history of the pain caused by the desegregation ruling; the other, more interesting one is a history of the post-Russell Celtics. Connelly, a native Bostonian, lived through the racial turmoil and was a devoted Celtics fan. Worth reading both as an account of urban political turmoil and as a basketball history, but the connection between the arrival of Bird and civic healing is never made convincingly, at least not for readers who didnt live through it.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2008, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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