There's a lot to unpack here.
I did not intend to read the "Young Readers Edition," but I accidentally requested it and decided to roll with it. Apparently, YREs are slightly simplified and less detailed. It was definitely a very fast read!
On the surface, it's a fun look at Nike in its infancy. Oh, that Buck! He ran into some troubling times, but kept right on running!
But if you scratch the surface at all, Knight's behavior problematic throughout the book. Nike's origin story is full of shady business (deliberate lying, outright stealing, extremely unwise management tactics) and he married one of his students. These are not minor white lies: at one point, he waits until a business opponent goes to the bathroom and then steals documents out of their briefcase, and then employs blocking shenanigans to sneak the folder back where it belongs. Just...super gross.
There were a couple of funny moments (due to a translation error, some shoe prototypes were named "Throw Ups"). But it's fascinating to see what Knight would call "gumption and hard work" but are really his privilege. Most of us cannot get away with pretending to own a company that doesn't exist, borrowing from the bank because we have a rich father, and bumping into successful connections constantly (his Stanford MBA would have surely helped with that).
If you are super into Nike, you might enjoy this book. Otherwise, give it a pass.