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Wizenard #1

Training Camp

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From the mind of basketball legend and Academy Award–winning storyteller Kobe Bryant comes this radically original portrait of five young basketball players, one enlightening coach, and the awesome transformative power of the game. Filled with insights about the mental stamina and emotional clarity that peak performance requires, this is an indispensable story for young athletes, coaches, educators, and anyone interested in the astonishing potential of team sports to unlock individual growth.

THE GAME WILL NEVER BE THE SAME

Magic doesn’t seem possible for the West Bottom Badgers. They’re the lowest-ranked basketball team in their league, and they live in the poorest neighborhood in Dren. Nobody expects them to succeed at anything. Plus, every kid on the team has secret struggles of his own.
When a new coach named Professor Wizenard arrives on the first day of training camp, the Badgers can’t explain the magical-seeming things they see and hear. Every player experiences unique and strange visions―visions that challenge everything they thought they knew about basketball, and about their lives and their secrets off the court. To survive the increasingly intense ordeals of training, the Badgers will need to take unimaginable risks, learn to trust their teammates, and confront the darkness within themselves.

592 pages, Hardcover

First published September 3, 2019

362 people are currently reading
3775 people want to read

About the author

Kobe Bryant

24 books24.2k followers
Kobe Bryant was an Academy Award–winning storyteller and content creator. He spent his days building stories to inspire the next generation of athletes to be the best versions of themselves. Kobe was a five-time NBA champion, two-time NBA Finals MVP, NBA MVP, and two-time Olympic gold medalist. He hoped to share all he learned with young athletes around the world.

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5 stars
401 (43%)
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286 (30%)
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161 (17%)
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48 (5%)
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27 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 131 reviews
Profile Image for Amy Bullis.
65 reviews1 follower
March 6, 2019
I work part time at Barnes & Noble and received this as an ARC prior to publication.

Imagine a basketball coach who's part Phil Jackson and part Professor Dumbledore, and you have Rolabi Wizenard. From practicing defensive drills against a tiger, to playing offense against their own shadow's, Coach Wizenard not only coaches the fundamentals of the game, but guides and counsels each of his young players as they face the biggest fears in their lives.

Written in an unusual format in that you read the story from the point of view of each of the characters, I found it engaging and entertaining. Any young sports fan who also likes the fantasy and magic of Harry Potter is going to enjoy this book. The first in a series, I'm looking forward to the next volume.
Profile Image for Howard.
2,126 reviews120 followers
November 27, 2022
4 Stars for Training Camp: Wizenard Series, Book 1 (audiobook) by Kobe Bryant and Wesley King read by Phylicia Rashad.

This is an amazing story but hearing it repeated 5 times was just a bit much for me. This is a great book for anyone who is interested in playing basketball but you may want to take a break when the story restarts with a new main character.
10 reviews1 follower
April 8, 2019
I wondered whether the format of the book, the telling of an identical story from five seperate perspectives would make it boring, but I was wrong. The subtle differences seen from the thousand facets of a single event, made the pages eminently turnable. To me, it felt like a chronicling of the rich insides of the actually physically lived human experience, of how we can't ever truly know what it feels like to inhabit someone else's head.
2 reviews1 follower
December 17, 2019
This book was very good. It was 5 different stories in one and went through the stories of Rain, Twig, Cash, Peño, and Lab. They are on a basketball team called the West Bottom Badgers. They are the poorest team in their city/state. In this age of time, there is an area called the bottom, which all of the poor people live in. Most of the team's players don't even have their own basketballs and a very old, run-down gym. They are all expecting another terrible season of only winning one or two games when a new coach, Mr. Rolabi Wizenard. He has them go through a training camp and the things he is making happen is making the players go crazy. He uses a thing called grana which can change reality for the people you are using it on. Some of the players realize he is using this grana but some don't. He has them do one or two drills a day that both work on one trait or attribute. Each player has solo encounters with him where they learn about their fears and how to overcome them. He gives them lessons and teaches them how to be better players by conquering their fears. They all go through the camp in their own eyes and it makes them a better basketball team.
1 review1 follower
September 3, 2019
Kobe Bryant's first book in his ambitious Wizenard Series: Training Camp is the tale of a struggling inner-city teenage basketball team that gets a magical assist from its head coach and wizard, Rolabi Wizenard. Training Camp is told from the perspective of five separate players, each describing the same event from his own unique point of view.

Success seems impossible for the West Bottom Badgers. The players live in the poorest neighborhood in Dren and they are the worst team in the league. However, they have never experienced anything like training camp before, and it’s about to transform them.

Inspiration for Training Camp came to Kobe from a variety of places such as Harry Potter creator J.K. Rowling and Game of Thrones author George R.R. Martin, but Kobe revealed that it was, “a mix, a little bit of Mary Poppins and coaches I have had like Phil Knight. It was some of the life lessons he has taught me and that’s where I came up with the character of Rolabi. And from that, I started creating the team and the different personalities and the emotional challenges they are dealing with. And that’s how it came to be.”

Kobe’s daughters also played a role in shaping the Wizenard Series. Kobe even tested out some of the unconventional drills on 13-year-old Gianna’s club basketball team which he coaches. He asked the team to use their imagination to get them to learn help-side defense or specific offensive sets and experimented with drills you will read about in Training Camp. Tigers on the court anyone?

For kids who love sportsbooks, this series is sure to hook you and leave you wishing for the next installment. Training Camp makes you believe in the power of the game, dedication, great coaches, and a team. If only magic could be summoned to make the next book in Kobe’s series appear sooner!
Profile Image for Victoria Whipple.
983 reviews15 followers
June 18, 2019
Set in a vaguely dystopic community, basketball players from the poorest section of the community are hoping that basketball will be the ticket out for them and their families. In this first installment of The Wizenard Series, we meet the boys, and get to know five of the intimately as their new coach, Rolabi Wizenard, literally gets inside their heads to discover their stories, as well as to help them discover how to be the best versions of themselves. Good basketball action, good coaching advice, and a wonderful thread of the power of reading and stories as the boys remember books from their younger days about "the wizenards". The reader should know that the boys have had some serious trauma in their lives which isn't tied up nice and neat, but they are given tools to help them cope. These tools go along with the coaching that helps them to be better team players, and thus optimize their individual roles on the team. Each chapter starts with a Wizenard Proverb, and happily those are all compiled in the endmatter. The cover of the book is velveteen, which initially is cool, but as a librarian, I imagine it will get pretty nasty as more hands handle it. The book is very thick, and while that will be a draw to some readers, I also think the story would have worked well if it had been released with each character's section as a separate book. That would make it more appealing to "reluctant readers" and also allow for readers to share and swap the various character's stories.
Recommended for readers who enjoy sports fiction, as well as those who like fantasy. And especially basketball fans. gr. 4-9
Profile Image for RumBelle.
2,073 reviews19 followers
April 9, 2019
ARC received through Goodreads Giveaways, from Granity Studios. Thank you to Goodreads and Granity Studios.

This was an amazing book on so many levels. First and foremost it's inspirational qualities. The five basketball players in this story that Coach Professor Wizenard helps each have enormous challenges. Life has not been kind, or easy to them, but through each of their stories we learn not only how they overcome adversity, but also how they learn to trust and triumph with each other as players on a team.

The writing is so vivid. You can see the scenes spring to life from the page in your mind. A lot of the things mentioned in this book are harsh, but they don't make the book dark. On the contrary they show how even the toughest things can be overcome with hope and determination. I am not usually one who likes to read books where the same events are repeated from several different POV's, and I have to admit, at times it was boring and repetitive, but each character was unique and that helped.

Magic, basketball, determination and strength are embodied in this book and I look forward to the next volume.
Profile Image for Michael Stewart.
Author 18 books267 followers
April 10, 2019
What a fun start to a series! I was drawn into the world of their ballcourt and the trials of these kids. It is a fantasy, yes, but more contemporary than Harry Potter (so far, and I can imagine what's to come as we learn more about Granity is really intriguing). At this stage, the wizardry (wizenardry?) is an expertly wielded device used to challenge the kids and draw out their greatest fears. Like the first Harry Potter, I’d slot this closer to Middle Grade than Young Adult (although I’ll enjoy watching the Badger’s grow up). What elevates the book further is two things. First, the writing is excellent. Second, the insights, which I’ve no doubt are a download of Kobe Bryant’s expertise, are phenomenal. To weave them in without it becoming didactic takes a lot of craft. I’ve read a few of Wesley King’s books now, and I find his ability to switch voices remarkable. Bring on game day!
Profile Image for Jason.
47 reviews2 followers
April 18, 2019
When Kobe Bryant said he had a book coming out, that dealt in Fantasy and Basketball, I was intrigued. I’m the same age as Kobe. I’ve basically grown with him. Saw him at 16 at a Basketball tournament. Followed his career, as a Lakers Fan. Cheered his accomplishments, and acknowledged his mistakes. I don’t accept the term “Stan” but I’m certainly a Fan.
I went into this books with lowered expectations. I was pleasantly surprised. Wizenard had elements of Hunger Games, Harry Potter, and Basketball instruction and philosophy. Essentially, it felt like a Phil Jackson session.
Profile Image for Ryan Wysocki.
1 review
June 7, 2019
In The Wizenard Series Training Camp by Wesley King, there is a basketball team in Dren, USA. Some of the characters in this book are Reggie, A-Wall, Devon, Peño, Rain, Big John, and Twig. They are very skeptical about their new coach, until they come to terms with the fact that he is magic. They grow together and help each other in their troublesome times. My favorite part is when they are forced to try and score on a tiger named Kallo. I really liked this book, and if you like basketball and/or magic then you will love this book. I would classify it as if hogwarts had a basketball team.
Profile Image for Corey Burton.
144 reviews6 followers
June 29, 2019
I absolutely loved this book!! It is so cool to know that young athletes can not only get a book that provides "escapism" through wizardry and magic, but also some valuable tips on life and competition. My favorite quote was "We can see so much, and yet, we choose not to. It is an odd decision." Another dope one is "everyone has a choice every moment of the day. Look, or look away."

I would highly recommend this to any parent! It also is written in a cool format, telling the story through the eyes of each of the key players providing different perspectives and different backgrounds.
Profile Image for Matthew Parks.
214 reviews8 followers
September 9, 2019
Man this book is fantastic! I've never read a book that was laid out the way this one is.

This book is about basketball only on the surface. Really, it's a book about life, fears, challenges, pride, humility, pain, grit, emotions, psychology, leadership, humanity, and hope. In other words, it's a book about you and me.

Well done and well made. I await its sequels with great anticipation!
3 reviews
Read
December 14, 2019
An incredible start to a series that will surely take the world by storm. Wesley King has delivered, and in an entirely unique style of writing. Instead of the story told by one character, it is the same story told through each team member's perspective. It has many basketball references but you do not need to know anything about the game to read this book. It would be best suited for a 11 year old and up.
Profile Image for Beth.
161 reviews
March 25, 2019
The writing is good but the format of repeating the exact scenes from each player perspective was mundane... I enjoyed the in depth character analysis, but nothing moves this story along... if book two does the same I’d skip it.
47 reviews2 followers
August 2, 2019
This is a great YA series for all ages! Same story told from different points of view of each character. Basketball fans and fantasy/magic fans will both enjoy. Also a great face-your-fears lesson and a lesson that everyone goes through stuff you don’t know about. Holds your interest throughout!
2 reviews1 follower
October 30, 2019
“If you rise above the conflict, you can see who needs your help,” says the author of The Wizenard Series: Training Camp to the reader(King 378). Normally when we go into battle we take into account the swords of the enemy, the movement of their chests as they breath heavily from over exertion. Yet, we almost never look around to see the people around us struggling against a ferocious attack from an enemy that seems almost invisible to you. But if you take your time, you can slowly start to see the figure attacking your friend, family member, or teammate. This is the meaning of the entirety of the book written by this amazing author. In this novel 10 days are replayed five times from different perspectives. Each perspective is a person from the West Bottom Badgers basketball team. A Basketball team is from a polluted city, with soil so acidic that plants could not grow, with air so rich with ash you could get sick with a few inhales, and with water so contaminated that it comes out yellow. The Basketball team consists of 10 ragged teenage boys from this less than humble town.
While there may be 10 boys, we only get to see the perspective of 5 of the boys. Each boy comes from a different background. With different economic statuses, different morals, and most importantly, different fears. While the book talks about Basketball and its lessons are centered around it, the main theme of this book is fear. Fear is what holds the boys back from truly attaining their maximum potential and also halts their maturity. Yet in a place so desolate, and with fears so controlling, how are you supposed to conquer these fears. That is where the newest coach of the Dren basketball team comes into play, ba dum-tss. His name is Rolabi Wizenard, and he seems to have this unnatural aura around him, tall, mysterious, and strangely magical.
As the days progress the “drills” that the boys are forced through grow harder and more impossible to complete. But with the help of their coach they reach an enlightened state where they find peace within themselves and can finally play the sport they signed up to play. Each protagonist is given many different personalities, from arrogance, timidness, and even depressed. This book is very intricate and you can only truly understand what happens each day of the training camp if you read each person's perspective. Each chapter has a different name depending on the current protagonist that you are following. They also have different quotes that can help you better understand your personal fear as well. As once you find your fear, you can help others with theirs. Each person will eventually This book truly is magnificent, and it even helped me recognize one of my own fears, and I am truly happy to have read it. It is an interesting read and even gives life lessons. It is a book that will affect you personally. I cried about 4 times while reading this book and learned a lot about myself. I cannot stress how much you need to read this book, if you are confused in your life read this book.
Profile Image for Raina.
1,718 reviews163 followers
June 4, 2020
When I chose to read this book, I had no idea that Kobe Bryant was going to die on January 26, 2020.

I was preparing for my annual tour of local middle schools, and for those visits I'm always looking for books which center non-white people. I'm also always looking for books that will appeal to middle schoolers who don't identify as readers. And also books that center non-white people which fit into "genres" other than realistic. This checks so many of my boxes.

And although the Kobe Bryant branding made me hopeful that this thing might appeal to more hesitant readers, I worried that the girth of this thing would put those same kids off (did you notice it's almost 600 pages?). I also didn't love that the actual writer is the opposite of ownvoices.

But I decided to try it.

And although I loved the concept, and knew that many elements would appeal to emerging readers, I was still worried as I read it. Not only was it long, but that length came from the fact that the books contains five different tellings of exactly the same events (with slightly varying content depending on character perspectives). Would teens who didn't identify as "book people" have patience for the repetition?

But I enjoyed it, and was kind of into the giant red fuzziness of the thing (literal fuzzy cover, if you haven't seen it irl). So I decided to booktalk it.

And then Kobe died.

The kids definitely responded. I chose to sell it by abridging the scene that starts on page 26 where Rain encounters the moving floor. I never utter the word "basketball" in the booktalk. They were consistently into it.
I also have had conversations with a mother who said her picky-reader teen devoured the whole thing and where can we get the rest of the series.

One thing I love about this is that it ISN'T a realistic sports story. At least not only that. There are lots of great realistic-feeling scenes of playing basketball, but it's set in a dystopic world, and has a significant fantasy core. I mean, it sure seems like this should have been done before - magical coach? Seems like a ::duh:: moment once it occurred to me.

This is good. I hope this series, this publishing company (the publishing company's name is a reference to the magic in this book) doesn't die with Bryant.
1 review
August 20, 2019
I thought this book was interesting because you can see the different character's going through struggles at the same time and watching them overcome it and start working as a team. **Spoiler Alert** Rain dad left him when he was very young his dad was a really good basketball player so that drove rain to become the best basketball player he can be to hopefully some day get his dad back. Also his whole entire family depends on him to get them out of the bottom where all the poor people live. This makes rain think he is superior on his team later on this creates a lot of conflict in the teams chemistry. Secondly his teammate twig is being builled by his teammate because he is richer than them. Also most of them don't know that are doing it. He is also very shy and doesnt cummicate his feelings a lot of the time.



16 reviews
June 17, 2019
This was an amazing book written by former NBA superstar Kobe Bryant. I really liked this book because it combined two things I love, basketball and science fiction. Its the story of a basketball team that is not very good. The players fight with each other and can't seem to get along. Then one day along comes Rolabi Wizenard, a coach that will change their lives. Throughout the story, Wizenard's special talents helps the team become better players and teammates.
Profile Image for JoAnne Richards.
97 reviews
June 20, 2019
Amazing! Basketball. Magic and Wizards. Proverbs. Face your fears. Find your dreams. Clear your mind. Trust your team. Awesome book! Loved it and it was ironic that I finished reading it the same night as the Raptors took the cup!
96 reviews
October 8, 2019
Lessons learned:
1) Everyone has challenges.
2) fear holds us back from accomplishing what we need to get done.
3) using lessons you learn from overcoming your fears can lead you to helping others.

I originally did not like the writing style of this book. However, I pushed through and ended up really enjoying it. I will read the second book.
Profile Image for Hernán Pinto Zambrano.
10 reviews2 followers
November 23, 2019
I'm a 31 yo who would have appreciated grown up with a Wizenard to help me face my fears. Good dialog ideas and each day in the training camp you do not know what to expect. In a very oversimplified watered-down form it is like Mary Poppins meets basketball. We all need a character we can relate and grow with. Recommend.
Profile Image for Elizabeth(The Book Whisperer).
398 reviews48 followers
November 5, 2019
What a fantastic read! Its kind of like Harry Potter meets The Bad News Bears! I never go into too much details in my reviews, I will just say I enjoyed this book very much.
2 reviews
Read
November 22, 2019
One of my favorite books ever. Kobe and Wesley did an amazing job creating characters that the reader can relate to. They added life lessons into the book and can help the reader improve themselves
Profile Image for Kilandra Bass.
34 reviews5 followers
May 28, 2020
I loved this book, and not just because it is Kobe Bryant’s! I loved that the story is told from every players perspective. At first I thought it would be redundant but I was pleasantly surprised by the differences in each story. The plot took me right back to my AAU days and made me wish my entire team had a chance to read this. Any basketball player, coach, or team athlete will undeniably relate to this book but anyone who wants to learn how to be a leader will relate as well. Looking forward to the next one in the series.
Profile Image for Annalee Schnebele.
400 reviews4 followers
December 2, 2019
It's basketball Harry Potter with some indications of social justice/Hunger Games type revolt in the future.
It's the same story of a basketball team and their new wizenard coach during tryouts when weird magical things happen. And then the story is told from five different player. It surprisingly doesn't repeat as much as you would think.
I'm interested to see where book 2 goes with the story.

Recommended for middle school students. There are some out there that like basketball and fantasy - and those are the kids who will eat this up.
Profile Image for Katherine French.
47 reviews6 followers
April 13, 2020
The same story told from 5 separate views could have been really effective. I believe it would have worked better if each team challenge would have been told through the player that the challenge was impacting the most. Then, we would still have the whole story but it wouldn’t be a rehash if each day of training for every story.
Overall, though, I like the world they’ve created and the characters are great. Plan to read the next book for sure.
1 review
April 6, 2020
This book was not my typical book. I am not an athletic person, and therefore this book about basketball did not draw me in at first. Then, I began to read. I took a liking to the book as soon as the characters started talking. The book was about five different teenage boys who went through so much, in a sort of futuristic time period of the Earth where the poor is greatly passed by the rich. A coach who has weird things going on when he is around helps to teach the boys that playing ball, is not all to life. He teaches them respect, teamwork, friendship, and still makes them even better at basketball. I feel like the main idea of this book was to teach that everyone has a hardship, and that doesn't mean you should look out for only yourself. After reading this book, I felt happy. This book makes me happy to read because of the fact that it is so long. It adds so many different perspectives, therefore answering questions that could not be answered otherwise. What are their problems? I like to know everything. This is one of my favorite books, and I can't wait to read the second book too.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 131 reviews

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