Brothers on three: a true story of family, resistance, and hope on a reservation in Montana

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Average Rating
Publisher
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Publication Date
2021.
Language
English

Description

**Winner of the 2021 Montana Book Award****Winner of the 2021 New Mexico-Arizona General Nonfiction Book Award****Finalist for the Spur Award for Best Contemporary Nonfiction****A New York Times Editors' Choice Pick**"A heart-stomping, heart-stopping read. Unsentimental. Unforgettable. Astonishing. Brothers on Three captures the roar of a community spirit powered by blood history, loyalty, and ferocious love."—Debra Magpie Earling, author of Perma RedFrom journalist Abe Streep, a story of coming-of-age on a reservation in the American West and a team uniting a communityMarch 11, 2017, was a night to remember: in front of the hopeful eyes of thousands of friends, family members, and fans, the Arlee Warriors would finally bring the high school basketball state championship title home to the Flathead Indian Reservation. The game would become the stuff of legend, with the boys revered as local heroes. The team’s place in Montana history was now cemented, but for starters Will Mesteth, Jr. and Phillip Malatare, life would keep moving on—senior year was just beginning.In Brothers on Three, we follow Phil and Will, along with their teammates, coaches, and families, as they balance the pressures of adolescence, shoulder the dreams of their community, and chart their own individual courses for the future.Brothers on Three is not simply a story about high school basketball, state championships, and a winning team. It is a book about community, and it is about boys on the cusp of adulthood finding their way through the intersecting worlds they inhabit and forging their own paths to personhood.

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Contributors
ISBN
9781250210685
9781250804778

Table of Contents

From the Book - First edition.

Prologue: I'll be there
We just know
They're following you
We need her
This crazy feeling of infinity
Keep up
Never do it for yourself
Almost exactly the same
He didn't like to go far
A brutal truth
Who's tired?
This is the right now
Why do you care what other people think?
It's not by accident
How can it be business?
Should we smile?
A perfect world
As good as your word
It if could just be this
It can also break your heart
"Love you" on three
The cracks
The singing
Home
Must be the new shoes
Where it all began
Where we're gonna be
Epilogue: We're still playing.

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Author Notes

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Readers seeking issue-oriented sports writing will appreciate these inspiring and thoughtful books about Indigenous athletes. Brothers on Three tracks a rural Montana basketball team's action-packed quest for the championship, while Spirit Run is an own voices memoir of distance running. -- Malia Jackson
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Moving and engaging, these inspiring stories chronicle a single pivotal season for a sports team battling the odds -- one a youth football team in Brooklyn (Never Ran), one a high school basketball team on Montana's Flathead Indian Reservation (Brothers). -- Kaitlin Conner
These books have the genres "sports and competition -- basketball" and "life stories -- sports"; and the subjects "racism," "basketball," and "basketball players."
These thoughtful and exciting accounts chronicle a high school basketball team's season on the Flathead Indian Reservation (Brothers on Three) and the Navajo Reservation (Canyon Dreams) as the players strive for championship glory. -- Kaitlin Conner

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Published Reviews

Publisher's Weekly Review

Journalist Streep debuts with an earnest account of a Montana high school basketball team's quest to repeat as state champions in 2018. Most players on the Arlee Warriors had familial ties to the Salish and Kootenai tribes of the Flathead Indian Reservation, and Streep documents growing excitement in the community during the team's march to victory in the 2017 "Class C" final. He also details a star player's work with a literacy coach to keep up his grades, and an administrator's concerns that the competitive pressure might spike suicide rates, which were already high among Native American boys. During the 2017--2018 season, the stakes were raised, especially for the team's seniors, many of whom sought a college education with the goal of returning to make Arlee better. Streep documents injuries and illnesses that nearly derailed the season, and describes how the players and their coach launched a suicide prevention initiative. After winning a second state championship, some Warriors left Arlee to play college ball. Streep is in top form with the on-court action and insights into the discrimination faced by Native athletes, though he somewhat shortchanges the tribal history. Still, this is a rousing portrait of a long-shot team beating the odds. Illus. (Sept.)

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Library Journal Review

Streep expands on his 2018 New York Times Magazine article in this debut--a riveting portrayal of the Flathead Indian Reservation in Arlee, MT, home to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. The focal point is the Arlee high school men's basketball team, whose members Streep follows as they win multiple state championships and pursue their dreams of playing college ball. Arlee is also the center of a suicide cluster that affects the entire community; recognizing the positive impact of the team's success, their coach urges the basketball players to make videos addressing mental health. The experiences of grandparents, parents, tribal elders, and teachers also figure prominently, adding perspective to the basketball action. Streep's magazine portrait won an American Mosaic Journalism prize for exploring generations of Salish and Kootenai families and their joys and difficulties; this book-length expansion benefits from his talent and compassion. VERDICT In addition to being great sports journalism that will touch anyone who loves high school sports, Streep's book will appeal to readers interested in histories of generational trauma. The focus on high school life and basketball gives it YA appeal.--Laurie Unger Skinner, Highland Park P.L., IL

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Kirkus Book Review

An action-packed yet reflective account of the quest for a high school basketball championship on and off a Montana Indian reservation. "In rural Montana, on the weekend of the state tournament, small towns evacuate, their residents filling arenas designed for rock bands and college teams." So writes Outside contributing editor Streep, setting the scene for a team on the Flathead Indian Reservation competing in Class C basketball, which "occupies emotional territory somewhere between escape and religion." The Arlee Warriors lack nothing in the way of community support; when they travel for away games across the sprawling state, nearly half the Flathead Nation goes with them. In other matters, the players are less fortunate. The school is underfunded, the reservation plagued by poverty and addiction, and prejudice is seldom far below the surface beyond its borders. Much of the success of the Warriors can be attributed to the skillful coaching and encouragement of a young man named Zanen Pitts, who recognizes what his players are up against. "Out of the kids that people are afraid to give a chance to, I'd give this kid a chance," he says of one of his students, a diligent and inventive player who gives his all off and on the court: "To watch him play was to become accustomed to surprise," writes Streep. Other players have their own styles, some brash and attention-seeking, some shy but fearless. Readers will applaud the boys' accomplishments against the long odds while shaking their heads at the many institutional and social obstacles placed in their way, not least of them lack of support from higher education. As the author documents, of 222 Montana students recruited for college athletics, "just one basketball player was Native American, a young woman." With its excellent on-court set pieces and search for context, Streep's book nicely bookends Michael Powell's Canyon Dreams (2019), a story of basketball on the Navajo Reservation. A thoughtful call for social justice as much as a story of striving for athletic excellence. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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Library Journal Reviews

Features editor and a tech reporter at Bloomberg Businessweek, Chafkin tells the story of The Contrarian, that is, billionaire venture capitalist and entrepreneur Peter Thiel, who has significantly influenced the course of Silicon Valley. Columbia history/journalism professor Cobb and New Yorker editor Remnick illuminate The Matter of Black Lives in pieces collected from the magazine, starting with Rebecca West's account of a lynching trial and James Baldwin's "Letter from a Region in My Mind" and moving on to embrace works by Toni Morrison, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Zadie Smith, Hilton Als, Jamaica Kincaid, and Henry Louis Gates Jr., among others (100,000-copy first printing). Having left behind her hometown in England's declining coal-mining region when her father declared There's Nothing for You Here, Brookings senior fellow Hill—now an American citizen and a former member of the National Security Council—draws on her extensive national intelligence work in Russia to warn that America's rocky situation today mirrors circumstances that led to Russia's socioeconomic decline (100,000-copy first printing). Rejecting the view that humans are irredeemably off-the-wall in their thinking (we have elucidated the laws of nature, for instance), two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist Pinker argues in Rationality that we don't avail ourselves of logic in many everyday situations because we don't really need to. But we can learn how to think more logically, even as we recognize that some rational acts (he cites self-interest) can lead to damaging irrationality for society. Oxford professor Srinivasan's The Right to Sex talks about talking about sex in the #MeToo era, stating, for instance, that we need to deepen the prevailing concept of consent into something more nuanced (50,000-copy first printing). Award-winning journalist Streep's Brothers on Three revisit the players, families, and community that celebrated when the Arlee Warriors brought home the high school basketball state championship title to the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana (75,000-copy first printing).

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Library Journal Reviews

Streep expands on his 2018 New York Times Magazine article in this debut—a riveting portrayal of the Flathead Indian Reservation in Arlee, MT, home to the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes. The focal point is the Arlee high school men's basketball team, whose members Streep follows as they win multiple state championships and pursue their dreams of playing college ball. Arlee is also the center of a suicide cluster that affects the entire community; recognizing the positive impact of the team's success, their coach urges the basketball players to make videos addressing mental health. The experiences of grandparents, parents, tribal elders, and teachers also figure prominently, adding perspective to the basketball action. Streep's magazine portrait won an American Mosaic Journalism prize for exploring generations of Salish and Kootenai families and their joys and difficulties; this book-length expansion benefits from his talent and compassion. VERDICT In addition to being great sports journalism that will touch anyone who loves high school sports, Streep's book will appeal to readers interested in histories of generational trauma. The focus on high school life and basketball gives it YA appeal.—Laurie Unger Skinner, Highland Park P.L., IL

Copyright 2021 Library Journal.

Copyright 2021 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Journalist Streep debuts with an earnest account of a Montana high school basketball team's quest to repeat as state champions in 2018. Most players on the Arlee Warriors had familial ties to the Salish and Kootenai tribes of the Flathead Indian Reservation, and Streep documents growing excitement in the community during the team's march to victory in the 2017 "Class C" final. He also details a star player's work with a literacy coach to keep up his grades, and an administrator's concerns that the competitive pressure might spike suicide rates, which were already high among Native American boys. During the 2017–2018 season, the stakes were raised, especially for the team's seniors, many of whom sought a college education with the goal of returning to make Arlee better. Streep documents injuries and illnesses that nearly derailed the season, and describes how the players and their coach launched a suicide prevention initiative. After winning a second state championship, some Warriors left Arlee to play college ball. Streep is in top form with the on-court action and insights into the discrimination faced by Native athletes, though he somewhat shortchanges the tribal history. Still, this is a rousing portrait of a long-shot team beating the odds. Illus. (Sept.)

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