The Jewish Chronicle

Winners and losers in sport and life

Enjoys the latest by Benjamin Markovits, Angela Kiverstein picks the best new children’s books

- David Herman

The Sidekick

By Benjamin Markovits Faber, £18.99

Reviewed by David Herman

THE LONDON based British American writer Benjamin Markovits has published 10 novels and in 2013 was named one of Granta’s Best Young British Novelists. He grew up in Texas and Germany, where he played profession­al basketball (the subject of his 2010 novel, Playing Days).

In The Sidekick Markovits returns to the world of sports. Or, rather, he returns to his particular take on the world of sports. Playing Days was one of his best novels because it was as much about disillusio­nment as it was about basketball. The book was suffused with small-time failure. It was a powerful bitter-sweet story about what becomes of lonely young men when their dreams go sour.

The same is true of The Sidekick. When we first meet the narrator Brian Blum, he is “a big fat slow kid” at high school in Austin, Texas. He tries out for the school basketball team where he meets two key figures in the novel, the basketball coach, Mel Caukwell, and a gifted young black basketball player, Marcus Hayes. Hayes becomes hugely successful, winning four championsh­ips for the Boston Celtics in the early 2000s and he’s now making a comeback with a new team. Blum becomes a talented sportswrit­er, but as the novel moves back and forwards in time, we begin to realise that Blum is not as successful as we might have thought. “Maybe this is my chance,” he says at a crucial moment, “maybe I can start again.” His friendship with Hayes gives him the chance to write the inside story of his famous highschool peer.

There are obvious echoes here of Richard Ford’s classic The Sportswrit­er (1986), the first of four novels by Ford about Frank Bascombe, a failed novelist turned sportswrit­er who undergoes a crisis following the death of his son. It is interestin­g that both Ford and Markovits are drawn to the darker side of American sports writing rather than to its glamour.

The key difference between Bascombe and Blum is that Blum is Jewish but only sort of Jewish. “My dad,” he says early on, “is a Passover-Hanukkah-Rosh HashanahYo­m Kippur kind of Jew.” Brian isn’t even that. His Jewishness is more a red herring than a schmaltz herring. This is more gentile Middle America than the world of Bellow or Roth. Austin, Texas, is the state capital of Texas, with a population of more than a million, but from the novel’s beginning in a high school, Markovits lends it an oddly small town feel.

The heart of the novel is the relationsh­ip between Blum and Hayes, partly based on the real-life relationsh­ip between Brian Windhorst, like Blum an ESPN writer, and the LA Lakers star, LeBron

James. Blum is a sportswrit­er, but he’s more interested in sport as a kind of metaphor. His subject, he tells us, “is what I wanted to spend my life writing about, natural selection, the way people get measured,” that “some people are better and some people worse, but there’s actually always somebody better.”

This is the key sentence in the novel. It isn’t just about the contrast between Blum and Hayes, a hugely rich sporting superstar, it’s not even mainly about basketball. It’s about how some people succeed and some fail in their profession­al and personal lives and perhaps about how America is failing. Whether or not you are interested in basketball, this is what draws us in. Much of the novel is set in the 1990s but The Sidekick has the melancholi­c and sour feel of Biden’s America and proves why Markovits is one of the best American writers of his generation.

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 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Inspiratio­n: LeBron James
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Inspiratio­n: LeBron James

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