Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Carroll, Jim - Peter Delacorte (review date 12 July 1987)
Carroll, Jim - Peter Delacorte (review date 12 July 1987)
Peter Delacorte (review date 12 July 1987)
SOURCE: “A Follow-Through beyond the Hoop,” in San Francisco Chronicle, July 12, 1987, p. 3.
[In the following review, Delacorte lauds Carroll's ability to create witty one-liners and clever vignettes in Forced Entries, but asserts that the book lacks substance and has an unfulfilling conclusion.]
Jim Carroll’s The Basketball Diaries was an extraordinary piece of work—an account of four years, more or less, in the life of a kid growing up in New York City.
The kid happened to be a basketball star, a thief, a male prostitute and an incipient junkie, so there was plenty of action and things got pretty lurid. But still the most impressive thing about the book was the smooth sophistication of its prose. To be sure, Basketball Diaries didn’t appear in book form until 1978, when Carroll was in his late 20s, and various anachronisms suggest that its text had been...
[The entire page is 1354 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Seamus Cooney (review date 1 November 1973)
- Gerard Malanga (review date November 1974)
- Jamie James (review date February 1980)
- Chet Flippo (essay date 26 January 1981)
- Publishers Weekly (review date 4 April 1986)
- Daniel L. Guillory (review date 15 April 1986)
- Christopher Lehmann-Haupt (review date 9 July 1987)
- Peter Delacorte (review date 12 July 1987)
- Kirkus Reviews (review date 15 May 1987)
- William Hochswender (review date 18 October 1987)
- Jim Carroll with Thomas Gladysz (interview date 1987)
- Cassie Carter (essay date Winter 1996)
- Publishers Weekly (review date 28 September 1998)
- Booklist (review date 15 October 1998)
- Jim Carroll with Suzan Alteri (interview date 13–19 January 2000)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
