c.2020, Flatiron Books
$27.99
229 pages
Either, or.
The choice is yours: do you pick one thing, or take the other? Stay where you are, or reach for better? This or that, any way, you always have to decide: do you take either, orโฆ as in โA Most Beautiful Thingโ by Arshay Cooper, do you take the oar?
Growing on Chicagoโs West Side, Arshay Cooper was used to seeing blood on the sidewalk. Gunshots were like lullabies and he hated it. His father was long gone, his mother was then too addicted to care for her children, and he โhad a funeralโ for her in his heart. Later, once his mother was clean and he started attending high school at Manley Career Academy, he became firm in his belief that his future was not on the streets. He knew gang-banging wasnโt for him, so he mostly stayed home and watched โFamily Matters,โ โThe Fresh Prince of Bel-Airโ and โA Different Worldโ on TV, absorbing their lessons and wishing his life was more like that of the characters.
And then he saw a boat.
It wasnโt just any boat, though: it was long and sleek, and Cooper quickly learned that it was used in a sport heโd never heard of. The white female coach said team members would be taught all they needed to know; the white man whoโd put the program together said that thereโd never been an all-Black high school rowing team, and he promised that anybody who stuck with the program would succeed in life. Though Cooperโs schoolmates talked smack about it, and in part because of a girl, Cooper and his best friend signed up for โcrew.โ
And everything clicked into place.
Rowing required discipline. It was exhausting, emotionally and physically. There were sacrifices. But when on the water, rowing, he says, โI donโt hear gunshots or ambulance sirens. I donโt see gang signs and I donโt have fearโฆ I feel powerful.โ
Hereโs all you need to know: โA Most Beautiful Thingโ lives up to its name.
It doesnโt start out that way, though: in laying the ground for his tale, author Arshay Cooper writes about the realities of growing up in a Chicago neighborhood that he hints could have been any-inner-city-where, any-inner-city-time. This gives the story its muscle and allows readers to better picture the scenes and the struggles he and his young teammates withstood. Youโll be happy to know that there isnโt a shred of boasting or false pride in that.
Once youโre that far into the book, then, you may notice that Cooper masterly makes you feel a part of the team. At that point, just go ahead, take their losses to heart. Be proud of the changes theyโve made. Think about the grace on race that Cooper offers. Grin like a fool at the triumphs and laugh at their nonconformity.
Itโs perfectly okay to get teary-eyed at the epilogue, really.
This is the feel-goodest of feel-good books, and you should have it now. Reading โA Most Beautiful Thingโ will leave you feeling merrily, merrily, merrily.

