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Sad and lonely basket cases

Two new novels deal with lonely men in crisis and within unusual groupings

September 14, 2012 14:31
Maccabi Tel Aviv vs Rishon Le Zion, 2012

ByDavid Herman, David Herman

2 min read

At first glance, these books seem very similar. Both are about groups of men — a team of Jewish basketball players travelling across America and six men who meet regularly in a London gym — sad, lonely men lifted by comradeship. But it is the differences which are more intriguing.

Back in the 1930s, the sports editor of the New York Daily News wrote: “The reason, I suspect, that basketball appeals to the Hebrew, with his Oriental background, is that the game places a premium on an alert, scheming, flashy trickiness, artful dodging, and general smart-aleckedness.”

There is no shortage of “artful dodging” in Charley Rosen’s delightful novel. No shortage of Jew-baiting either. In January 1936, a group of Jewish basketball players (and an Irishman) cross America, from New York to LA, playing games for money. They are the Moses All-Stars.

It’s a sort of road novel, bringing to life every aspect of Depression America. On their travels they play in prisons, army camps, Native American reservations, rural hick towns, Las Vegas and LA, even staging a fund-raiser for striking miners. There are several constants. The food is bad, the cheap hotels are full of bugs and everywhere they encounter racism, antisemitism and violence.