Initial reaction: 4.5 stars overall. Being able to see the realistic relationships of this group of Black teens in "When I Was the Greatest was very cool. Ali, Needles and Noodles were great to follow, and while you're mostly following Ali in his POV, you get to know and care about all of the characters here since the narration approaches them so casual and vividly. Some parts are tough considering what the boys go through, but it also has very heartening ones too.
Full review:
I don't think it's a secret that Jason Reynolds is one of my favorite YA writers today, and as of the time that I'm writing this review, he's won a MacAuthur Fellowship in 2024 for his contributions to children's and YA lit. Well deserved honor.
So I went back and forth on "When I Was The Greatest" as to whether I read it or not for a while. I remembered the cover, but I was like "Wait, I'm pretty sure I read this, but I don't know." Turns out I read a good portion of it a while back, but didn't finish it because I had to return it prematurely to my library, so I never arrived to the very end. I grabbed this as soon as I could get my hands on the audio this year, flew through it. There were pieces of the narrative I had to refresh my memory on, but you can remember Ali, Needles, and Noodles once you get to know them. The easy way this is told - via Ali's viewpoint - makes it easy to see how they interact amongst themselves and the neighborhood they're in. Ali is fifteen, a boxer, who navigates his day to day in the neighborhood that gets a bad rep, but he finds his own normal. Noodles tries to be cooler than he is most times (and the reason for his nickname is entertaining to say the least), but sometimes he gets in trouble BECAUSE of intentionally trying to be cool and do things he shouldn't be doing. Ali tries to keep him in check, but it tests their friendship in more ways than one. And then there's Needles, who has a very realistic portrayal of a Black teen who has Tourette's Syndrome (as someone who knows a few people with that, I appreciated the portrayal). It's really cool how supported Needles is by Ali and the close community looking out for him. Reason why he's called Needles is because of the sewing materials and yarn he carries around to help him calm. It's why you see a knitted gun on the cover in one cover version. While you would think that would make this story a bit intense in a certain way, it's not quite like that. (It gets heavy in another sense, which I'll get to.)
Much of the narrative is showcasing the friendship and interactions between the boys. When things shift is after one night when the boys attend a party - one they very much are not supposed to be at, but are invited anyway. Everything goes wrong at that party and lands Ali, Needles, and Noodles in more trouble than they bargain for. It not only tests their relationships between each other, but also creates a problem that Ali doesn't know if it'll be simple for him to get out of *because* of those that recognized who he was at the party. I liked being able to see this through to the conclusion, which wraps up rather well for the events, and ultimately left me wanting to dive into more narratives like this where you see such a strongly asserted leading Black teen and his relationships with family and friends. If there had been another book following more of Ali, Needles and Noodles in their respective experiences and growing pains, I would gladly have picked it up. For this, as a self-contained story though, it worked. I loved it, and I especially loved it on audio.
Overall score: 4.5/5 stars