Shooting Stars is the story of LeBron James and his journey with a group of basketball teammates that become like a family to him. It starts off with James describing his childhood and what it was like for him growing up. His mom raised him all by herself from the time she was only 16, and went from job to job trying to provide for them. He grew up in a not-so-good part of Akron, so some of the things he experienced as a child were things no kid should ever have to go through. He often moved around from place to place. When James was about nine, he began to play basketball, and took to it instantly. That is when he met Coach Dru, a man that would be a mentor and coach to him for a majority of his high school basketball career. He played for a team called the Shooting Stars. That's also when he met Coach Dru's son, Little Dru, who would soon be a part of the Fab Five. Shortly after that, a boy named Sian came into the picture, and was the third member of the Fab Five. The three boys had a connection and Coach Dru drove them all the way to Cocoa Beach, Florida for a tournament because they were doing so well. They finished ninth of sixty-four teams. The fourth member of the Fab Five was Willie. He instantly connected with the three other boys and they became the Fab Four. The four of them went through a lot in middle school and had to decide where they all wanted to go to high school. They made a mutual decision to attend an all-white Catholic school, St. V, where they endured lots of racism. Despite racism, the boys were outstanding at the game of basketball. They had a coach called Dambrot, who led them to win a state championship. The boys excelled quickly, but they were still missing a player. Romeo was the fifth link to their Fab Five. At first, he didn't feel like he belonged with LeBron, Dru, Sian, and Willie because they already shared a strong bond. The Fab Four finally decided to make him another one of their "brothers," and become the Fab Five. The team worked hard to achieve their goals. Dambrot left after their freshman year and Coach Dru became head coach. The boys went through some rough spots during their junior year when they became careless, and also their senior year. The Ohio High School Athletic Association was out to get them because they were a nationally ranked team. Despite rough patches, the Fab Five stepped up their game senior year with an undefeated season, giving them the number one rank in a poll from USA Today. The last time they played basketball together was when the five of them won a national tournament together. They all remain very close with each other due to their bond that came from the game of basketball.
I will admit that I haven't been much of a LeBron fan ever since he left Cleveland. I don't support his decision, but I will admit that he is an extraordinary basketball player. Reading this book developed a sort of soft spot within me for the man. I think that it's amazing how he went through so many terrible things as a child, and ended up becoming one of the greatest athlete's in the world. I also found his story of the Fab Five heart-warming because of how close the team was. They never could have done as well as they did without each other. The way LeBron talked about them in the book, it sounded like he was talking about his family, and that really hit home. I love the fact that if you work really hard, you can achieve your goals, but even more, I love the fact that it can be done with a group of people that can develop such a bond just by having a common goal. The book was very touching.
In Shooting Stars, there seemed to be two main focuses. One was Lebron and all that he went through to get to where he is now. The other was the group of five boys and the coach that helped him get there. I think that LeBron's purpose in writing the book was to show people what he went through. On page 191 in the book he talks about the pressure he went through by growing up without a father when his mother was 16, watching his home get condemned and torn down, moving all over the place, and staying up at night worrying about his mother. The kid went through a lot, but just because he didn't have the ideal childhood, he wasn't stopped from achieving his goals. He wanted people to know that they can still do something great in the world even under bad circumstances. He also talks about some of the rough patches he went through with his team, like losing important games. LeBron, too, went through losses in order to become great. By writing the book, he wanted readers to be inspired by his stories so that they can try to achieve their own personal goals.
The theme was more centered on the Fab Five. All five of them had a goal to win a national championship, and they didn't give up on that goal until they reached it. The theme was to not give up on your most valued goals. After St. V won the championship, LeBron was thinking about how the dream started. He said that "A lot of people set goals in life but never fulfill them... We had accomplished our goal and dream, and as members of the Fab Five, we had done it in the last game of basketball we would ever play together" (James 241). It took these boys their entire high school careers to accomplish their dream, but their hard work and refusal to give up paid off. LeBron, Little Dru, Sian, Willie, and Romeo went after something that seemed impossible. In the end however, it was their willpower as a team to not give in that made them successful.