Browse all books

Books with author Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

  • Giant Steps the Autobiography of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar & Peter Knobler

    Hardcover (Bantam Books, March 15, 1990)
    None
  • Airplane 2-Movie Collection

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Lloyd Bridges

    details
    None
  • Coach Wooden and Me Lib/E: Our 50-Year Friendship on and Off the Court

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

    Audio CD (Grand Central Publishing, May 16, 2017)
    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar explores his fifty-year friendship with Coach John Wooden, one of the most enduring and meaningful relationships in sports history.In 1965, eighteen-year-old Lew Alcindor played basketball for Coach John Wooden at UCLA. It was the beginning of what was to become a fifty-year long relationship. On the court, they broke basketball records. Off the court, they transcended their athletic achievements to gain even wider recognition and tremendous national respect.Part memoir, and part inspirational, Abdul-Jabbar reveals the lessons Coach Wooden taught him through the Pyramid of Success and discusses how they in turn shaped his life. Through beautiful storytelling, Coach Wooden and Me takes you back to the basics of what a coach should be.
  • Becoming Kareem: Growing Up on and Off the Court

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

    Preloaded Digital Audio Player (Hachette Audio, Dec. 7, 2017)
    In his first memoir written especially for young readers, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar will focus on his relationships with several important coaches in his life - including his father, his high-school coach and Coach Wooden - as he tells the story of his life and career. Like many kids in elementary school, Kareem (then Lew Alcindor) struggled with fitting in, pleasing a strict father, and severe shyness that made him socially awkward. Unlike most kids, he also had to grapple with a sudden growth spurt that shot him up taller than pretty much everyone around him, including students, teachers, and even his own father. His increasing fame as a basketball player throughout high school brought new challenges as this shy boy was shoved into the national spotlight. At the same time, social unrest in the country, particularly involving the growing civil rights movement, tugged at his conscience as he tried to find his place in it. After all, he was just a kid. What could he do? Recruited to UCLA, his fame as an unstoppable center made him a college superstar. But as his fame rose, so did the social turmoil in the country: Vietnam War protests, Malcolm X and the Nation of Islam, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., large-scale riots, the Women's Movement. He could have hidden from all the turmoil as a sports celebrity, but he chose to join in the social evolution. The result was converting to Islam and changing his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. The public backlash was blistering, but he didn't waver.
  • By Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar

    Hardcover (Candlewick Press (MA) Jan-03-2012, Aug. 16, 1919)
    By Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem ( Author ) [ { What Color Is My World?: The Lost History of African-American Inventors } ]Jan-2012 Hardcover
  • Black Profiles in Courage: A Legacy of African-American Achievement

    Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Alan Steinberg

    Paperback (William Morrow Paperbacks, July 3, 2000)
    In this ideal introduction to black history, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar examines the lives of heroic African Americans and offers their stories as inspiring examples for young people, who too rarely encounter positive black role models in history books or in the media.Profiled here are Peter Salem, the volunteer soldier who turned the tide at Bunker Hill; Joseph Cinque, leader of a daring revolt on the slave ship Amistad; Frederick Douglass, self-taught writer-orator and escaped slave who forced President Lincoln to issue the Emancipation Proclamation years ahead of schedule; Harriet Tubman, who led at least three hundred slaves to freedom; Lewis Latimer, whose scientific work was integral to the achievements of Bell and Edison; and many more.Shining a bright light on the touchstones of character, these exemplary stories reemphasize the integral role of African Americans in weaving the fabric of our nation and form an empowering legacy from which Americans of all ages can draw inspiration, wisdom, and pride.