Review: The Blind Side, by Michael Lewis

Russ Allbery eagle at eyrie.org
Wed Nov 28 21:26:29 PST 2018


The Blind Side
by Michael Lewis

Publisher: W.W. Norton & Company
Copyright: 2006, 2007
Printing:  2007
ISBN:      0-393-33047-8
Format:    Trade paperback
Pages:     339

One of the foundations of Michael Lewis's mastery of long-form
journalism is that he is an incredible storyteller. Given even dry
topics of interest (baseball statistics, bond trading, football
offensive lines), he has an uncanny knack for finding memorable
characters around which to tell a story, and uses their involvement as
the backbone of a clear explanation of complex processes or situations.
That's why one of the surprises of The Blind Side is that Lewis loses
control of his material.

The story that Lewis wants to tell is the development of the left
tackle position in professional football. The left tackle is the player
on the outside of the offensive line on the blind side of a
right-handed quarterback. The advent of the west-coast offense with its
emphasis on passing plays, and the corresponding development of
aggressive pass rushers in the era of Lawrence Taylor, transformed that
position from just another member of the most anonymous group of people
in football into one of the most highly-paid positions on the field.
The left tackle is the person most responsible for stopping a pass
rush.

Lewis does tell that story in The Blind Side, but every time he diverts
into it, the reader is left tapping their foot in frustration and
wishing he'd hurry up. That's because the other topic of this book, the
biographical through line, is Michael Oher, and Michael Oher the person
is so much more interesting than anything Lewis has to say about
football that the football parts seem wasted.

I'm not sure how many people will manage to read this book without
having the details of Oher's story spoiled for them first, particularly
given there's also a movie based on this book, but I managed it and
loved the unfolding of the story. I'm therefore going to leave out most
of the specifics to avoid spoilers. But the short version is that Oher
was a sometimes-homeless, neglected black kid with incredible physical
skills but almost no interaction with the public school system who
ended up being adopted as a teenager by a wealthy white family. They
help him clear the hurdles required to play NCAA football.

That's just the bare outline. It's an amazing story, and Lewis tells it
very well. I had a hard time putting this book down, and rushed through
the background chapters on the evolution of football to get back to
more details about Oher. But, as much as Lewis tries to make this book
a biography of Oher himself, it's really not. As Lewis discloses at the
end of this edition, he's a personal friend of Sean Tuohy, Oher's
adoptive father. Oher was largely unwilling to talk to Lewis about his
life before he met the Tuohys. Therefore, this is, more accurately, the
story of Oher as seen from the Tuohys' perspective, which is not quite
the same thing.

There are so many pitfalls here that it's amazing Lewis navigates them
as well as he does, and even he stumbles. There are stereotypes and
pieces of American mythology lurking everywhere beneath this story,
trying to make the story snap to them like a guiding grid: the wealthy
white family welcoming in the poor black kid, the kid with amazing
physical talent who is very bad at school, the black kid with an addict
mother, the white Christian school who takes him in, the colleges who
try to recruit him... you cannot live in this country without strong
feelings about all of these things. Nestled next to this story like
landmines are numerous lies that white Americans tell themselves to
convince themselves that they're not racist. I could feel the
mythological drag on this story trying to make Oher something he's not,
trying to make him fit into a particular social frame. It's one of the
reasons why I doubt I'll ever see the movie: it's difficult to imagine
a movie managing to avoid that undertow.

To give Lewis full credit, he fights to keep this story free of its
mythology every step of the way, and you can see the struggle in the
book. He succeeds best at showing that Oher is not at all dumb, but
instead is an extremely intelligent teenager who was essentially never
given an opportunity to learn. He also provides a lot of grounding and
nuance to Oher's relationship with the Tuohys. They're still in
something of a savior role, but it seems partly deserved. And, most
importantly, he's very open about the fact that Oher largely didn't
talk to anyone about his past, including Lewis, so except for a chapter
near the end laying out the information Lewis was able to gather, it's
mostly conjecture on the part of the Tuohys and others.

But there is so much buried here, so many fault lines of US society, so
many sharp corners of racism and religion and class, that Oher's story
just does not fit into Lewis's evolution-of-football narrative. It
spills out of the book, surfaces deep social questions that Lewis
barely touches on, and leaves so many open questions (including Oher's
own voice). One major example: Briarcrest Christian School, the high
school Oher played for and the place where he was discovered as a
potential NCAA and later professional football player, is a private
high school academy formed in 1973 after the desegregation of Memphis
schools as a refuge for the children of white supremacists. Lewis
describes Oher's treatment as one of only three black children at the
school as positive; I can believe that because three kids out of a
thousand plays into one kind of narrative. Later, Lewis mentions in
passing that the school balked at the applications of other black kids
once Oher became famous, and one has to wonder how that might change
the narrative for the school's administration and parents. There's a
story there that's left untold, and might not be as positive as Oher's
reception.

Don't get me wrong: these aren't truly flaws in Lewis's book, because
he's not even trying to tell that story. He's telling the story of one
exceptional young man who reached college football through a truly
unusual set of circumstances, and he tells that story well. I just
can't help but look for systems in individual stories, to look for
institutions that should have been there for Oher and weren't. Once I
started looking, the signs of systemic failures sit largely unremarked
beneath nearly every chapter. Maybe this is a Rorschach test of
political analysis: do you see an exceptional person rising out of
adversity through human charity, or a failure of society that has to be
patched around by uncertain chance that, for most people, will fail
without ever leaving a trace?

The other somewhat idiosyncratic reaction I had to this book, and the
reason why I've put off reading it for so long, is that I now find it
hard to read about football. While I've always been happy to watch
nearly any sport, football used to be my primary sport as a fan, the
one I watched every Sunday and most Saturdays. As a kid, I even kept my
own game statistics from time to time, and hand-maintained team regular
season standings. But somewhere along the way, the violence, the head
injuries, and the basic incompatibility between the game as currently
played and any concept of safety for the players got to me. I was never
someone who loved the mud and the blood and the aggression; I grew up
on the west coast offense and the passing game and watched football for
the tactics. But football is an incredibly violent sport, and the story
of quarterback sacks, rushing linebackers, and the offensive line is
one of the centers of that violence. Lewis's story opens with Joe
Theismann's leg injury in 1985, which is one of the most horrific
injuries in the history of sport. I guess I don't have it in me to get
excited about a sport that does things like that to its players any
more.

I think The Blind Side is a bit of a mess as a book, but I'm still very
glad that I read it. Oher's story, particularly through Lewis's
story-telling lens, is incredibly compelling. I'm just also wary of it,
because it sits slightly askew on some of the deepest fault lines in
American society, and it's so easy for everyone involved to read things
into the story that are coming from that underlying mythology rather
than from Oher himself. I think Lewis fought through this whole book to
not do that; I think he mostly but did not entirely succeed.

The Tuohys have their own related book (In a Heartbeat), written with
Sally Jenkins, that's about their philosophy of giving and charity and
looks very, very Christian in a way that makes me doubtful that it will
shine a meaningful light on any of the social fault lines that Lewis
left unaddressed. But Oher, with Don Yaeger, has written his own
autobiography, I Beat the Odds, and that I will read. Given how
invested I got in his story through Lewis, I feel an obligation to hear
it on his own terms, rather than filtered through well-meaning white
people.

I will cautiously recommend this book because it's an amazing story and
Lewis tries very hard to do it justice. But I think this is a book
worth reading carefully, thinking about who we're hearing from and who
we aren't, and looking critically at the things Lewis leaves unsaid.

Rating: 7 out of 10

Reviewed: 2018-11-28

-- 
Russ Allbery (eagle at eyrie.org)              <http://www.eyrie.org/~eagle/>


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