In this game of life
your family is the court
and the ball is your heart.
No matter how good you are,
no matter how down you get,
always leave
your heart
on the court.”
As a literacy guru, I love to examine titles of books and ponder about why the author selected the given title.
What is a crossover?
The dictionary defines this as:"a point or place of crossing from one side to the other"
However, in basketball, a crossover is a dribble where the player "fakes to one side and gets the defender to follow him/her before abruptly bouncing the ball back over to your other hand when the defender is turned. "(source). Like these best crossovers in basketball history:
Like Heartbeat, the story is told in a collection of poems, from Josh Bell's point of view--a son of a basketball star and a brother to his twin, Jordan.
Now back to the title, I found many crossover themes within this book:
- A crossover to an under-told story. A story of a minority family and parents who value education, discipline, and self-respect.
- A crossover on the court, as the twins, basketball stars themselves, are working towards the end point of a championship.
- A crossover, in brotherhood, as brothers work through growing up together when life tests their friendship.
- And of course, a big game changing crossover for this lovable family (in which you must read to "crossover" this information yourself).
Although I found the plot somewhat predictable. I feel this book has a great deal of power. Power to crossover to hands of young and adolescent boys. Boys who look down on poetry, boys who love the excitement and passion of basketball, and most importantly boys who do not see themselves represented in literature as boys who need to see life through a different lens.
The poems read like hip-hop--full of energy and speed
. . . A bolt of lightning on my kicks . . .
The court is SIZZLING
My sweat is DRIZZLING
Stop all that quivering
Cuz tonight I’m delivering.
I'm not surprised this book earned both the 2015 Newbery Medal Winner, and the2015 Coretta Scott King Honor Award Winner.
It's a must for all classroom libraries and a book you might recommend to help a student crossover into a new genre of literature.
-Dr. K.