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The Boys of Riverside

A Deaf Football Team and a Quest for Glory

ebook
0 of 2 copies available
0 of 2 copies available
NAMED A BEST BOOK BY BOOK RIOT, AND MORE! • The incredible story of an all-deaf high school football team’s triumphant climb from underdog to undefeated, their inspirational brotherhood, a fascinating portrait of deafness in America, and the indefatigable head coach who spearheaded the team, by New York Times reporter and Page One Correspondent, Thomas Fuller.
"The Boys of Riverside is another example of how anyone can achieve their dreams, making what appears impossible, possible.” —Marlee Matlin, Academy Award winner
"Remarkable"—Wall Street Journal • "Narrative nonfiction at its finest, filled with drama, detail and action."—Los Angeles Times  • "Inspiring." —Parade.com

In November 2021, an obscure email from the California Department of Education landed in New York Times reporter, Thomas Fuller’s, inbox. The football team at the California School for the Deaf in Riverside, a state-run school with only 168 high school students, was having an undefeated season. After years of covering war, wildfires, pandemic, and mass shootings, Fuller was captivated by the story of this group of high school boys. It was uplifting. During the gloom of the pandemic, it was a happy story. It was a sports story but not an ordinary one, built on the chemistry between a group of underestimated boys and their superhero advocate coach, Keith Adams, a deaf former athlete himself. The team, and Adams, tackled the many stereotypes and seemed to be succeeding. Fuller packed his bags and drove seven hours to the Riverside campus.
The Boys of Riverside looks back at the historic 2021 and 2022 seasons in which the California School for the Deaf chased history. It follows the personal journeys of their dynamic deaf head coach, and a student who spent the majority of the season sleeping in his father’s car in the Target parking lot. It tells the story of a fiercely committed player who literally played through a broken leg in order not to miss a crucial game, as well as myriad other heart-wrenching and uplifting narratives of players who found common purpose. Through their eyes, Fuller reveals a portrait of high school athletics, inspiring camaraderie, and deafness in America.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 3, 2024
      New York Times reporter Fuller debuts with a stirring account of how the football team from the California School for the Deaf, Riverside rocketed to a state championship in 2022. The start of the 2021 season looked inauspicious for the Riverside Cubs, who were out of shape from the pandemic and fresh off eight consecutive losing seasons. The Cubs surprised even themselves by winning their first game in a 68–0 blowout against a hearing school. The victory was no fluke; the Cubs went undefeated before losing the championship game 74–22 against Los Angeles’s Faith Baptist Contenders. The loss steeled the Cubs’ determination, and they racked up another undefeated run during their 2022 season, culminating in a rousing 80–26 championship victory against Faith Baptist that Fuller recounts in breathless detail. The heart of the uplifting story lies in Fuller’s moving portraits of the student athletes. For instance, he describes how a running back attended school while living out of his father’s car and how a wide receiver almost quit the game after playing on a Pop Warner team where he was berated by his coach for not following instructions he couldn’t hear. As far as underdog stories go, this one is a surefire crowd-pleaser. Agent: Jane Dystel, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret.

    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2024
      How an all-deaf football team from Southern California beat the odds to become state champions. Fuller's beat as San Francisco bureau chief for the New York Times included reporting on hard-hitting "heavy stuff" like in-state natural disasters, mass shootings, and poverty. Yet when he ran across the story of the Cubs, a football team from the California School for the Deaf, Riverside, he felt called to investigate. "This team's journey, a tale of belonging and excellence, was the story I wanted to write," he notes. "It felt like a salve at a time of such turmoil for the country." In 2022, Fuller temporarily gave up his bureau chief position and moved to Riverside, where he followed the team for one extraordinary season when the team "wanted to prove that being deaf on the gridiron gave them an edge." Watching games and immersing himself in interviews conducted through American Sign Language interpreters, he came to know the players and their community. He also learned about the eight-man game the Cubs played--which some called the purest form of football--while observing how team members, though often physically smaller than those they played, relied on inborn gifts like speed, agility, and their ability to understand their world through heightened powers of observation. What makes Fuller's book such a page-turner--and very much a story for a wide audience beyond sports enthusiasts--is its deep involvement with the Cubs as people. From the first chapter, the author makes it clear that his story is not just about a winning team, but about human resilience and the players who exemplified it--e.g., Phillip Castaneda, an unhoused student who dazzled on the field with quickness, and Felix Gonzalez, who broke his leg just before the playoffs that the Cubs ultimately won in his honor. An uplifting book about triumphing over adversity.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2024
      T his thoroughly reported story is officially about a high-school football team whose members are Deaf. But in the skillful hands of Fuller, the San Francisco bureau chief for the New York Times, it's also about the evolution of attitudes toward and treatment of people with hearing challenges. In 2021, the football team at the state-run California School for the Deaf, the Riverside Cubs, were undefeated, successfully using sign language to communicate with each other across the field under the direction of their Deaf coach and advocate, Keith Adams. Fuller notes that for every 1,000 births in the U.S., two babies are diagnosed with some hearing loss, and onetenth of those are profoundly deaf. Should they be forced to go to mainstream schools and speak, or should they go to schools where they can learn and use sign language? The latter, definitely. As Fuller notes, studies show the most significant contributor to happiness is relationships with other people, and sports is a great arena for such connections. As Fuller tucks in many fascinating tidbits about deafness and community past and present, he offers cautious optimism about the future.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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