c.2020, Little Brown Books for Young Readers
$17.99
40 pages
Your favorite player loves getting buckets.
And thatโs good โ thatโs the goal of the game, after all, right? Itโs called basketball because thatโs what youโre supposed to do: put the ball in the basket, dunk it right in the bucket. You might need help to do that now, but practice, and maybe youโll be a pro someday. Maybe youโll be like the players in โSwish!โ by Suzanne Slade, illustrated by Don Tate.
Ka-thumpa, ka-thumpa, ka-thumpa. thatโs what people heard all day, if they lived near Chicagoโs South side. It was โthose boysโ and their basketballs, doing โnonstop layups, all-net free throws, and sky-high jump shots.โ
Sure, they were talented boys. Everyone knew that but they were Black and there were not many options for them, so those boys joined a traveling team and they met Abe Saperstein. That was when things really started happening: it was Sapersteinโs idea to re-name the team the โHarlem Globetrotters,โ which made it seem like theyโd dribbled everywhere around the world.
It was almost as if they already had: the team played ball nearly every night in small towns all over the country, but their style was different. Because people didnโt like seeing any Black players beat the hometown White teams, the boys had to learn new tricks. They did a โOne-finger ball spinning.โ They did their โRapid-fire mini dribbling.โ People began to laugh, and they began to enjoy the show as the โTrottersโ racked up wins.
But it wasnโt all fun: there were lots of places where the Globetrotters werenโt welcome. They couldnโt get a drink of water just anywhere. Some hotels turned them away. Sometimes, they werenโt allowed in restaurants.
And still, they played because they were athletes! Even when most teams in the NBA wouldnโt hire Black players, the Harlem Globetrotters were real winners on the court. They proved it by beating the Minnesota Lakers! They could beat anybody!
And then one day, โsomething incredible happenedโโฆ.
Everything spherical in your house can be dunked. Your 5-to-9-year-old has proven that, so what next? Well, โSwish!โ will give them baskets of joy.
With the kind of quick-paced, wild fun that you get at a Harlem Globetrotters game, author Suzanne Slade brings that fast action to the page with a story of racism, perseverance and resilience. While thereโs a main focus on just one generation here โ roughly the Depression years through the early 1950s โ Slade proceeds to show the overall evolution of the team by including a timeline and additional material. She also briefly touches upon individual players, but not more recent ones, which may disappoint grown-ups; kids whose hands are practically glued to a round, dimpled ball wonโt notice that omission at all.
This narrative would be the lesser without artwork by Don Tate. Kids will love his movement on the pages; adults will have difficulty not hearing โSweet Georgia Brownโ in their heads. That makes โSwish!โ fun, itโs fast, and if thereโs a future NBA or WNBA fan in your house, your child will love it by the buckets.

