An overstuffed biography of the best point guard in NBA history.
Larry Bird, of the much-reviled Boston Celtics, took great pleasure in tormenting Magic Johnson (b. 1959) during the many years of their rivalry for NBA supremacy. Appropriately, Lazenby, who has authored biographies of Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant, opens with Bird’s marveling at what he called “a one-man fast break.” Readers may wish that Lazenby had some of Bird’s economy of language, for he follows with a staccato flood of encomia: “Magic. In defiance of the physical world. Finite. Complete. Perfect. Open only to pale imitation.” The worshipful overwriting is characteristic (“He was so sweet then, his head tilted often in that sudden tenderness that only the truly innocent possess”), but determined readers will tough it out. As the author shows, few players worked as hard as Magic, and few were so attuned to the strategy of the game and the wiles of opponents. Lazenby turns up a few things that only diehard fans might know, connecting them to larger matters. For instance, Johnson was dyslexic, and though he had trouble reading, he compensated by listening so closely to instructions that he was able to act as a de facto coach for less attentive teammates. The author is very good at both play-by-play narrative and recalling the ways of the receding past, as when he writes of a push-and-shove between Bird and Johnson’s fellow Laker Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, “In the modern game, the exchange would have resulted in immediate suspensions. In that era, the NBA wasn’t about to throw stars like Bird and Kareem out of a highly charged championship series.” Lazenby also writes sensitively of Johnson’s HIV–positive status and its consequences, as well as Johnson’s post–NBA emergence as a highly successful entrepreneur.
Too long by half, but a satisfying bio for fans of the legendary player.