14 min 41 sec

There’s Always This Year: On Basketball and Ascension

By Hanif Abdurraqib

Explore the intersection of basketball, community, and the Black experience in America. This summary dives into how sports serve as a metaphor for home, identity, and the relentless pursuit of success.

Table of Content

Imagine the sound of a basketball hitting the pavement in the quiet hours of an Ohio evening. It’s a rhythmic, steady heartbeat that echoes through neighborhoods where the game is much more than a sport—it’s a language of survival and a map toward something higher. We often look at the bright lights of the NBA and the soaring statistics of superstars and think we understand what success looks like. We see the flight, the dunks, and the trophies, and we assume the story ends there. But there is a much deeper narrative beneath the surface, one that involves the ground we stand on and the people who cheer for us when the cameras are turned off.

In this exploration of Hanif Abdurraqib’s reflections, we are invited to look at the world through the lens of basketball to understand the heavy concepts that define our lives: home, identity, time, and the true cost of ‘making it’ in America. This isn’t just a breakdown of stats or a history of legendary games. It is a throughline that connects the asphalt of a local playground to the gleaming hardwood of a professional arena, showing us that the struggle to ascend is universal.

We will navigate the complexities of being seen and the pain of being misunderstood. We’ll look at how a single athlete can carry the weight of an entire city’s hope and what happens when that weight becomes too heavy to bear. Through this journey, we’ll see how the passage of time acts as both a witness to our failures and a catalyst for our growth. The ultimate goal is to redefine what it means to win, moving away from external accolades and toward a sense of personal integrity and communal belonging. So, let’s step onto the court and see what the game can teach us about being human.

Discover how a physical location can become a vessel for a community’s collective soul and why the departure of a hero feels like a personal loss.

Explore the complex duality of being both celebrated and confined by the world’s gaze, and how sports reflect the broader triumphs and defeats of cultural identity.

Consider the ticking clock not as a countdown to an end, but as a silent witness to the growth and persistence that define our journey.

Peel back the layers of fame and wealth to see the hidden costs of ‘making it’ and discover why authenticity is the ultimate victory.

As we hear the final buzzer sound on this exploration, we are left with a new way of looking at the games we watch and the lives we lead. Through the lens of basketball in Ohio, Hanif Abdurraqib has shown us that the stories of our sports heroes are actually mirrors of our own struggles with home, identity, and the relentless march of time. We’ve seen that ‘home’ is a complicated, beautiful, and sometimes painful place that shapes us long after we leave it. We’ve recognized that our identity is a precious thing to be defended against a world that often tries to simplify or commodify who we are.

Most importantly, we have confronted the myth of the American Dream and the heavy price of success. We’ve learned that the true measure of a life isn’t found in the highlight reels, but in the quiet persistence of showing up day after day, regardless of the score. Whether you are a fan of basketball or have never picked up a ball in your life, the lessons remain: cherish your roots, protect your integrity, and remember that as long as there is time left on the clock, there is always an opportunity for a new beginning.

Take a moment to reflect on your own ‘court’—the place where you strive, fail, and get back up again. Who are the people on your bench? What are the dreams you are carrying for your community? By staying true to your own path and valuing your connections over external trophies, you find a version of success that no one can take away from you. The game of life is long, and while the seasons change, the spirit of the player remains. Keep playing, keep striving, and remember—there’s always this year.

About this book

What is this book about?

There's Always This Year is a deep, lyrical exploration of what it means to belong and to strive for greatness. Using the cultural backdrop of basketball in Ohio, the book examines the rise of superstars like LeBron James alongside the quiet struggles of everyday people. It challenges the conventional narrative of the American Dream, suggesting that 'making it' is often a more complex and costly endeavor than it appears from the outside. The book promises a journey through the emotional landscapes of hope and resilience. It uses the mechanics of the game—the ticking clock, the flight toward the hoop, and the pressure of the final shot—to reflect on the passage of time and the weight of community expectations. Readers will discover a poignant critique of how society views Black athletes and a heartfelt celebration of the places and people that shape our sense of self.

Book Information

Rating:

Genra:

Biographies & Memoirs, Politics & Current Affairs, Sports & Fitness

Topics:

Culture, History, Meaning, Sociology, Sports Psychology

Publisher:

Penguin Random House

Language:

English

Publishing date:

March 25, 2025

Lenght:

14 min 41 sec

About the Author

Hanif Abdurraqib

Hanif Abdurraqib is a multi-award-winning poet, essayist, and cultural critic known for his deeply personal reflections on music, culture, and race. Abdurraqib’s best-selling works include A Little Devil in America, Go Ahead in the Rain, and They Can’t Kill Us Until They Kill Us – all of which garnered Abdurraqib widespread acclaim for his lyrical prose and poignant storytelling.

Ratings & Reviews

Ratings at a glance

3.6

Overall score based on 14 ratings.

What people think

Listeners find the author’s prose to be lyrical and nearly poetic in its delivery. Additionally, the narrative is praised for its sense of everlasting hope, and one listener characterizes the work as a beautiful game of basketball.

Top reviews

Phimwan

Picked this up after the National Book Critics Circle announcement and wow, Abdurraqib is operating on another level entirely. He uses the framework of a basketball game to explore the heavy weight of expectations and the concept of home in Ohio. The prose is thick and lyrical, demanding that you slow down and really inhabit every single syllable. Truth be told, it feels more like an extended poem than a standard memoir, which might frustrate some readers looking for a straight timeline. But for me, the way he connects LeBron’s career to the lived realities of Black life and the cycle of the prison system was breathtaking. It’s a book about miracles and how we define them. Truly stunning work that lingers long after you close the cover.

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Kob

This book is a masterclass in how to weave personal history with cultural observation. I’ve always admired Hanif's ability to find the profound in the mundane, but here he elevates basketball to something spiritual. It’s rhythmic, it’s messy, and it’s deeply vulnerable. He doesn’t just talk about sports; he talks about the ghosts of the people we used to be and the cities that keep us grounded. Frankly, the discursive style might be a bit much if you aren't in the mood for deep thinking, but the payoff is immense. It felt like a beautiful game where the score doesn't matter as much as the effort. I’m in awe of his brain and how he sees the world.

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Samira

As a basketball fan from the Midwest, seeing LeBron James used as a lens for examining ambition and displacement hit home in a way I can't quite describe. Abdurraqib captures that specific feeling of "there’s always this year," that eternal hope that keeps us coming back to the court and to our hometowns. The structure is brilliant, mimicking a game with four quarters and timeouts that allow the reader to catch their breath. It’s dense and demands your full attention, covering everything from the invisibility of certain communities to the costs of becoming a legend. I found myself highlighting entire pages just for the sheer beauty of the phrasing. This is easily one of the best things I’ve read in years.

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Chanon

Look, Hanif Abdurraqib writes sentences that you want to live inside of for a while. This isn't just a book about basketball; it’s a book about how we survive the places we are from. He treats LeBron James not just as an athlete, but as a symbol of possibility and a mirror for the community’s own dreams. The way he explores the concept of "witnessing" is nothing short of profound. I was moved to tears by the sections on his family and the quiet moments of grace found in the struggle. It’s a complex, multi-layered text that rewards multiple readings. If you’re looking for a simple sports bio, look elsewhere, but if you want art, this is it.

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Jack

Finally got around to finishing this today, and I think it’s a stunning meditation on the concept of grace. Abdurraqib has this way of making you care about things you never thought you’d be interested in through sheer poetic force. The book explores the intersections of class, race, and athleticism with such a sharp, intellectual edge. I loved the rhythmic quality of the writing; it felt like listening to a great jazz record where the improvisations are the best part. It’s about the people who stay and the people who leave, and the stories we tell ourselves to keep going. A total triumph of cultural criticism that feels both timely and timeless.

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Aurora

Ever wonder if a sports book could actually be a prayer? This feels like one. Hanif Abdurraqib is an alchemist of language, turning stories of Ohio neighborhoods and hoops into something sacred and shimmering. It’s a challenging read because it refuses to be linear, jumping through time and space like a fast break. I did find the pacing a bit sluggish in the middle sections where the poetic digressions went on for a bit too long. However, the emotional hits are so heavy that they more than make up for the occasional confusion. It’s a meditation on grace and what it means to belong to a place that doesn't always love you back.

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Ladawan

The countdown structure of the chapters creates this incredible sense of urgency that mimics the final minutes of a tight game. I loved how the author blended his own memories of growing up in Columbus with the larger-than-life mythos of LeBron James. It’s a very internal book, focused on the author’s perspective and his specific, soulful way of looking at the world. Gotta say, it’s not a light read by any means. You have to be prepared for some heavy topics like the carceral state and the fragility of Black life. While I loved the sentiment, I do think the lack of a clear narrative might lose some people who prefer traditional biographies. Still, the prose is absolutely top-tier.

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Fang

To be fair, I went into this expecting a standard biography of LeBron James and found something much more experimental instead. It took me a second to adjust to the "prose poetry" style, but once I did, I was hooked. The author’s voice is so earnest and heartfelt that you can’t help but be swept up in his observations about Ohio and the nature of fame. It’s a slower-paced book than I’m used to, and it leaves a lot of questions unanswered, which was a bit frustrating at times. But the beauty of the language and the depth of the insight into human ambition are undeniable. It’s a book that asks for your patience and pays it back in full.

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Bond

Not what I expected at all, and I'm still trying to process the experience of reading it. While I recognize the brilliance in the writing, I found it incredibly difficult to follow the thread of the narrative. It’s very much "prose poetry," and there were times when I just wanted him to get to the point rather than drifting into another tangential thought. I came for basketball history and stayed for… well, I’m not entirely sure what I stayed for. There are important discussions about racism and classism buried in here, but the stream-of-consciousness style made it a bit of a slog for me personally. If you like experimental non-fiction, you’ll love it, but it just wasn't my cup of tea.

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Brooklyn

The truth is, I struggled with the nonlinear flow of the narrative for the first fifty pages. I’m a huge fan of Hanif’s previous work, but this one felt a bit more self-indulgent in its stylistic choices. It reads more like a collection of loosely connected thoughts than a cohesive book about basketball or identity. I appreciated the sections on family and the weight of legacy, but I often felt like I was drowning in the "lyrical" descriptions. It’s undeniably well-written, but the lack of a grounding narrative made it hard for me to stay engaged. I wanted to love it more than I actually did, even though I respect what he was trying to achieve with the format.

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