A profile of a WNBA star who gave up her professional career to focus on a humanitarian cause.
Maya Moore was a bona fide star—a noisy kid with “awesome stats” even as a middle schooler, who led her high school team to a 125-3 record and went on to spectacular exploits in both the WNBA and the 2012 and 2016 Olympics. But Maraniss commends her particularly here for suddenly retiring in 2019 to campaign for the release of Jonathan Irons, a Black man who at age 18 was unjustly convicted by an all-white jury of burglary and assault and sentenced to 50 years in prison. The two were later married. The author ends there but goes on to provide discussion questions and to urge readers to think and learn more about racial injustice. “Anyone can make a difference,” he closes. “And everyone should try.” Along the way, he points out the sexism that Moore observed; NBA games get far more exposure than WNBA games—a disparity that frustrated her (“The ball of momentum is deflating before my eyes”). In stiff but sincere monochrome illustrations, Hodge tracks Moore from a child to a sturdy, confident adult; aside from one image of a white basketball coach with a clownish face, figures in the illustrations are expressive and dark-skinned.
Message-driven but centered on a well-chosen example.
(career stats, glossary, resource list) (Biography. 8-10)