Former Celtics center Kendrick Perkins wrote the book, and here is What He Said about it

Kendrick Perkins arrived in Boston as an 18-year-old, and he eventually helped the Celtics win their first championship in 22 years.

Kendrick Perkins has transformed himself from a journeyman center toward the end of his playing career to a wildly popular and opinioned basketball analyst.

The 38-year-old former Celtic decided to release his memoir, “The Education of Kendrick Perkins,” earlier this year to detail his life as a country boy in Texas raised by his grandparents after the murder of his mother who came to Boston as an 18-year-old to eventually help the Celtics win their first championship in 22 years.

Perkins played 14 NBA seasons, but his best years — when he was an enforcer, defensive stopper, and occasional scorer — were his first eight in Boston. He credits the city and the Celtics organization with helping him mature.

When I thought about it, it was the right time,” Perkins told the Globe of writing his autobiography. “Post-career and I had a window of a year and half where I wasn’t doing anything. I wasn’t working and I felt like with me starting to be on television, becoming a TV personality. A lot of people who know me, know who I was as a person on the floor and then all of a sudden I’m in television, they’re like, ‘Perk, I didn’t know you had this much personality.’ I’m like there’s a lot to my story, about the death of your mom when you were 5.

“The difference between this memoir and others is not only did I tell my story, but I also gave basically education and we also dug into the rules of history, the history of Boston, the history or Beaumont, Texas, and got to the roots of everything. My locker-room experiences, the Hall of Famers that I played with and watched them grow.”

Perkins was drafted in 2003 by the Grizzlies and traded to the Celtics on draft night along with Marcus Banks. Perkins was fresh out of Ozen High School in Beaumont, and in his Perk style, he revealed he did not arrive in Boston on a plane.

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“I decided I was so country, I didn’t know nothing about shipping cars, and me and my friend George Davis jumped in my truck and drove 30 hours to come here,” he said. “It was an instant culture change, whether it was from food, to just everyday living, the weather. You think about it and you have Southern hospitality, so when you walk into a store, you could pass by a complete stranger and they’re going to speak to you. It’s not like that in Boston. Everybody is going their own separate ways and it don’t really have anything to do with racism, it’s just people are on their own path. I had to get adjusted to that.”

Perkins said his Boston experience did not include racism. It took him time to get adjusted to the big-city lifestyle, but the Celtics created a support system for the young center, years prior to the arrival of Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen. Perkins credited then-president of basketball operations Danny Ainge for serving as a mentor.

“I also talked about how so many guys report about racism in Boston, but I never experienced it here,” Perkins said. “I also talked about the racism from my end, more so than I did about Boston. Boston is what made me a man and I came in at the right time with new ownership, with Danny Ainge taking over the role, and I had a great group of guys that were the vets in the locker room, from Tony DelkWalter McCartyEric WilliamsTony Battie. They took me under their wing and showed me the ropes on how to be professional, when to go out, when not to go out, how to show up to the facility and be the last one to leave.”

 

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