Luke Epplin’s Moses and the Doctor is a smart, lively, and deeply researched look at Julius Erving and Moses Malone—two Hall of Fame greats who helped shape the NBA’s rise but rarely get their due. Epplin blends history, personality, and humor as he traces their ABA roots, their contrasting paths to stardom, and their unforgettable partnership on the 1983 Philadelphia 76ers. Basketball fans of any era will find new insights and plenty of joy in these pages.
Title/Author:
“Moses and the Doctor: Two Men, One Championship and the Birth
of Modern Basketball” by Luke Epplin
Rating:
5 of 5 stars (excellent)
Review:
Luke Epplin’s Moses and the Doctor is a rich, deeply
researched, and thoroughly entertaining reconsideration of two Hall of Fame
giants who helped shape professional basketball’s rise in the 1980s: Julius
Erving and Moses Malone. While Bird, Magic, and Jordan usually dominate the
conversation about the NBA’s boom years, Epplin makes a compelling case that
Erving and Malone deserve far more credit—both for their brilliance and for the
ways their careers bridged the ABA’s renegade creativity with the NBA’s
emerging mainstream appeal.
Epplin traces their early paths through the ABA, where
Erving became a cultural phenomenon with his soaring, improvisational style,
even if few fans actually saw him play on television. Malone, meanwhile, broke
barriers as the first player to sign professionally straight out of high
school, grinding through unstable franchises while quietly developing into one
of the most intelligent and relentless centers the sport has ever seen.
Epplin’s portrayal of Malone is especially strong, dismantling long‑standing misconceptions
about his personality and intellect.
Once the ABA folded into the NBA, their trajectories
diverged—Erving becoming the polished superstar of the Philadelphia 76ers,
Malone bouncing from Portland to Buffalo before blossoming into a two‑time MVP
in Houston. All of this background sets the stage for the book’s most
compelling section: the unlikely pairing of these two contrasting stars when
Malone signed with Philadelphia in 1982 for a then‑record contract.
Epplin shines here, capturing the humor, tension, and
surprising evolution of their relationship. The book is filled with laugh‑out‑loud
quotes, sharp reporting, and memorable anecdotes, including Malone’s famous
“Fo’, Fo’, Fo’” prediction (accurately rendered as “Four, Four, Four”) that
nearly came true during the 76ers’ dominant 1983 championship run. Epplin also
illustrates how both men subtly swapped public personas—Erving becoming quieter
and more introspective, Malone stepping into a more vocal leadership role.
For fans of that era, this is a wonderfully nostalgic trip,
but even die‑hard basketball junkies will learn something new. I certainly
did—I had no idea Malone nearly backed out of the deal to join Philadelphia
because Caldwell Jones was no longer on the roster. Details like that make this
book a standout.
I wish to thank Grand Central Publishing for providing a
copy of the book via NetGalley. The opinions expressed in this review are
strictly my own.

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