Incredibly thorough book: the definitive biography of an iconic celebrity athlete of our time. This book reads well for both the diehard Kobe/Lakers fan and the casual sports fan, just enough basketball technical and contract talk and Lakers drama/analysis not to lose depth, but easy to read and friendly enough to non-basketball aficionados. Not just a blow-by-blow account of every playoff game that Kobe played in, although the most memorable games revealed fascinating background and postgame analysis. There is depth, breadth, analysis of every major basketball moment for Kobe, along with the background and major figures in shaping those moments and the international icon.
The author uses Kobe Bryant's early life to reveal his unparalleled work ethic and borderline psychotic drive to be great from a very young age. There is a lot of great oral history from his former coaches and teammates during his childhood in Italy to foreshadow his extreme expectations of teammates and his alphadog mentality for years to come.
I enjoyed the fascinating background around key figures in Kobe's life: Joe Bryant, Sonny Vaccaro, Jerry West, Phil Jackson, and many more. Going indepth on these figures helped explain the context of Kobe's life at different points. I loved the interviews of former assistant coaches, teammates, agents, high school rivals, etc. to describe Kobe's killer instinct mentality on the basketball court in his early years.
Some of the more memorable oral commentary came later from J.A. Adande, Ric Bucher, Tex Winter, Derek Fisher, Shelley Smith, and Rudy Garciduenas. They provide the oral history in many chapters revealing some of the darker sides of Kobe Bryant.
Lakers fans will get a kick out of reminiscing the success, drama, and dysfunction of the organization, while also learning a lot from the behind-the-scenes looks at key points in recent Laker history. Kobe's relationship with Shaquille O'Neal in the early years is described in full page-turning detail to show that their conflict started well before they won their first ring together.
The author doesn't pull up any punches describing Kobe and Phil Jackson's declining relationship during and after the three-peat. Even more remarkable was the tale of how their relationship mended enough to win two more championships. All in all, the author presents clearly how Kobe's reclusiveness did not mesh with Shaq's gregariousness and sensitivities or Jackson's bravado.
The tragedy of Kobe's becoming a global icon came in his personal life, particularly his estrangement from his family. Meeting Vanessa Laine led to his relationship with his immediate family to take a turn largely because of clashing personalities, power, and money.
On his off-the-court life, there is one flaw I found with this book, and it's a pretty big one. I really feel there was not enough on the sexual assault case in Eagle, Colorado. Even if the reader were to be on "Kobe's side" in the sexual assault case, its impact on the world's perception of Kobe and how it changed his legacy is undeniable. This is the first very public sexual assault case in sports in the cable television era long before the "Me Too" era. Even aside from the pain it caused his relationship with his wife Vanessa, Kobe's squeaky-clean image takes a nosedive, his celebrity becomes polarizing. Yes, the book mentions that his image is tarnished, but it's not convincing.
Instead, the sexual assault case becomes reduced and constantly referred to as Kobe's "legal troubles" throughout the second half of the book. It seems that the lesson about the case for the interviewees in the book was on how Kobe was still able to perform at a high-level despite the "inconvenience" of flying between Colorado and Los Angeles during the season. I was disappointed by this characterization of the sexual assault case, that we barely get to know the alleged victim's point of view, but probably even more so that it wasn't analyzed as deeply in shaping Kobe's legacy as, say, his Adidas deal did.
Still, for nearly all of the book, I loved reading it. What I appreciated most about the book was that more than half of the book was devoted to Kobe's upbringing and early NBA years before his first championship. There's a whole history behind his father Joe Bryant, of Philadelphia prep basketball, of Nike vs. Adidas, of Jerry West, of Phil Jackson, of Michael Jordan, of the Laker organization, and so on. All of this context to help explain Kobe Bryant may not appeal to the reader who just want to read about Kobe's basketball exploits, but it paints the full picture for understanding Kobe's basketball career.
Finally, the last chapter... was hard to read. Don't get me wrong, it was fascinating to go through the post-championship years and the endless cycle of post-Jackson coaches. Kobe's relentless pursuit of greatness is on full display again in the midst of his body breaking down from overuse.
But I so badly didn't want this book to end. His retirement tour, his optimism for his life after basketball, his turning focus towards his daughters, his reconciliation with a reporter, his desire to take on writing, his "Dear Basketball" poem...
Knowing that Kobe Bryant's life ends shortly after this book's publication makes the last chapter so... heartbreaking. I won't give it away, but the way the book ends after his last NBA game was very sad, in light of what we know will happen on Sunday, January 26th, 2020.
Thanks for the joys, the ups, the downs, and the thrills, Black Mamba. Rest in peace, Kobe.