Synopses & Reviews
The Divine Nature of Basketball: My Season Inside the Ivy League describes a season spent as a virtual coach in the Ivy League. Shadowing head coach of Yale menand#8217;s basketball James Jones and bird-dogging his team from first practice to final game, Ed Breslin fulfills every college basketball fanand#8217;s fantasy of being an NCAA Division I coach.
Itand#8217;s sports journalism in the tradition of George Plimpton. But above all, itand#8217;s a celebration of basketball, of participation in life, of gifted mentors and coaches, and of the proper approach to collegiate athletics.
And all this in the throwback Ivy League. Where lofty academic requirements merge with high athletic standards. Where every game is an intense and ancient rivalry. Where no league tournament renders the regular season meaningless. Where nearly all league games are played two-a-weekend. Where back-to-back games and five-hour bus trips make for weary legs and heartbreaking upsets. Where coaches have to be teachers and mentors first and foremost.
Over the course of the season, Breslin comes to understand that itand#8217;s coaches like James Jones, their priorities in order, who realize that lessons learned in sport are often enduringly important, and transferable to other areas of life. They know that the game of basketball, invented in a YMCA gym to vanquish winter blues and channel excess energy, is a divine template for teaching and mentoring. They know that mastery of a demanding skill in youth, and of oneand#8217;s self, often leads to mastery in adult life: in the arts, in the sciences, in the professions, and in business.
The author experienced all this, and more, firsthand. But the most important lesson he learned is that if you ever visit the Yale locker room, whatever else you do: and#147;Donand#8217;t step on the Y.and#8221;
Review
If John Feinstein set the standard in covering a college basketball campaign in his landmark A Season on the Brink . . . Breslin still animates the form with this account of Yale Universitys 201112 team. . . . Breslin offers especially insightful and detailed breakdowns of the teams practice sessions and vivid play-by-plays of each game. If Feinstein gives readers an unvarnished look at an NCAA powerhouse, Breslin shows how beautiful— even, yes, divine— the college game can be away from the national spotlight.”— Booklist
Review
and#147;[Ed Breslinand#8217;s] new book on Ivy League hoops is truly divine.and#8221; and#150;
Providence Journaland#147;Breslinand#8217;s [book] is a Plimpton-like celebration of college basketball as told by one of its biggest fans.and#8221;
-New Haven Register
and#147;If John Feinstein set the standard in covering a college basketball campaign in his landmark A Season on the Brink . . . Breslin still animates the form with this account of Yale Universityand#8217;s 2011and#150;12 team. . . . Breslin offers especially insightful and detailed breakdowns of the teamand#8217;s practice sessions and vivid play-by-plays of each game. If Feinstein gives readers an unvarnished look at an NCAA powerhouse, Breslin shows how beautifuland#151; even, yes, divineand#151; the college game can be away from the national spotlight.and#8221;-Booklist
and#147;If you want to go on a journey of life in Division I hoops involving genuine student-athletes in the competitive Ivy League, this book is a must-read. Ed Breslin will take you on this amazing trip as he witnessed it firsthand.and#8221; and#151;Dick Vitale
"Ed Breslin displays an enthusiasm for college basketball that's as refreshing as it is knowledgeable. His astute observations, shrewd interpretations, and colorful descriptions make this a soon-to-be classic. When all is said and done, his book tells a very human story of a man living out a dream." -Fran Dunphy, head coach, Temple University, former 10-time Ivy League champion coach of Penn
and#147;You will finish this book with a smile on your face, pleased to have spent time with a writer who unapologetically and without the trendiness of irony or the falseness of sentiment has led you on a journey that, unequivocally, was the greatest of his life. And because that journey revolves around the game of basketball, it revolves around the world, as well.and#8221; and#150;From the foreword by Rick Telander
and#147;A Divine Nature of Basketball dazzles while capturing the spirit of the game Naismith built. . . . [It] glistens with humility and candor. . . . A slam dunk.and#8221; and#151;Fansided
"Breslin clearly loves basketball, and his passion for the game comes through on just about every page of his book."
--Library Journal
About the Author
Ed Breslin is a former editor and publisher who spent two decades in the book business. He is the author of
Drinking with Miss Dutchie and
Americaand#8217;s Great Railroad Stations, and coauthor of
Sherman: The Ruthless Victor.