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[WaPo] [tinman] ‘The Sense of Wonder’ puts a fictional spin on Jeremy Lin’s ascendance

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by Os Trigonum, Jan 14, 2023.

  1. Os Trigonum

    Os Trigonum Member
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    @tinman

    ‘The Sense of Wonder’ puts a fictional spin on Jeremy Lin’s ascendance
    Matthew Salesses’s novel follows an Asian American basketball player whose toughest contests are off the court

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/2023/01/11/matthew-salesses-sense-of-wonder/

    excerpt:

    In early 2012, Jeremy Lin, the first Taiwanese American in the NBA, led the New York Knicks out of a miserable slump to win seven games in a row. The cover of Sports Illustrated trumpeted Lin’s “sudden and spectacular ascent,” and fans around the world went crazy with Linsanity!

    Beyond his opponents on the court, though, Lin also had to contend with racist taunts from the media. A Fox Sports columnist mocked Lin’s genitals. And when the Knicks’ winning streak broke, an editor at ESPNposted a photo of Lin with the headline: “Chink in the Armor.”

    For Matthew Salesses, a Korean American writer and avid basketball fan, those responses to Lin epitomized the peculiar species of racism that Asian Americans face in the United States. Soon after the ESPN incident, Salesses published a deeply personal essay in which he wrote: “When the disparagements came — as we feared and maybe suspected they would but hoped they wouldn’t — it was like that first time looking in the mirror. We realized that for all of Jeremy Lin’s accomplishments, we as Asians are still different, are still seen differently than other races by the vast majority of Americans.”

    Now, Salesses has transformed his thoughts on Lin into an insightful novel called “The Sense of Wonder.” That long decade of reflection included the death of Salesses’s young wife, the rise of Korean television in the United States and the mass shooting of Asian American spa workers in Atlanta. Ideally, we’re willing to think about the intersection of tragedy, pop culture and anti-Asian prejudice in a way we weren’t a decade ago.

    Salesses’s protagonist is Won Lee, a 6-foot-2 point guard on a one-year contract with the Knicks. As the only Asian American in the NBA, he’s achieved his boyhood dream, although he’s experiencing that dream mostly on the bench. The coach doesn’t like him, and the media has already written him off as a token player whose “role on the team was to sell jerseys to New York Asians.” As a narrator, Won maintains a weary earnestness, acknowledging the bitterness of his situation without allowing it to embitter him.

    But early in the novel, a coincidence of accidents sidelines the team’s three other point guards, and the coach is finally forced to give Won a chance. “When I got into the game,” he says, “I did the same thing I had done my whole career: I played as if my life depended on each play, because it did.” He scores 25 points and earns the Knicks their first win in 11 games. From then on, Won starts every time. The victories pile up, the money floods in, the coach is branded a genius, and “randos stripped off their shirts in the middle of winter to reveal Won’s number on their chests.”

    All over the world, the media dubs this amazing winning streak the Wonder. “People compared the Wonder to a fairy tale,” Won says, “and like a fairy tale, the trouble was the ever after.” Because, you see, Won is never just playing basketball; he’s simultaneously playing an exhausting game designed by White people to idealize him, dismiss him and exoticize him while he dutifully pretends he doesn’t see color. Even the celebrations in his honor are stained with humiliation, as when Madison Square Garden hands out fortune cookies with Won’s photo inside.

    Welcome to “The Sense of Wonder.”
    more at the link

     
    tinman likes this.
  2. Dairy Ashford

    Dairy Ashford Member

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    Is there a follow up novel about Lunar Washington, who goes unpicked through 20 rounds of the Lower 48 Gridiron Association draft because he wouldn't switch from tight end to punt returner despite winning the Adriatic 10 and the Tulip Mania Bowl, spends six years in the Poutine League and wins the Hoser Cup before signing with the Channelview Payzones under coach Jerome Organburg and owner Lowenbrau Methuselah in an effort to rebuild a few years after firing their former coach Indigent Flathead.
     
    #2 Dairy Ashford, Jan 16, 2023
    Last edited: Jan 16, 2023

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