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Loading... All the Sundays Yet to Come: A Skater's Journeyby Kathryn Bertine
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This memoir of an ice skater who "failed" while sinking into anorexia was not the book I was expecting from the description. I wound up skimming a lot of it because it was just boring. ( ) Read during Fall 2004 A compelling but somewhat scattered memoir of Bertine's life as a skater, rower, and triathlete. Her story is interesting but the writing style is hard to get invovled with. I actually liked the way she bounced back and forth in time to tell her story; stuck in South America on a horror of a touring ice show back to training as an amatuer in a cold rink in Yonkers. I think there is probably alot more depth of feeling but her breezy style makes it hard to see. Perhaps that is the intent but it didn't completely work. Still, an extremely engrossing story. no reviews | add a review
In her hilarious and heartfelt memoir, Kathryn Bertine tells the strange-but-true story of what life is really like behind the glitz and glamour of professional figure skating. Bertine's childhood dream came true when she earned a place in a touring ice show. But as she traveled through the back roads of Chile and Argentina in a rickety bus with the international cast of Hollywood on Ice, she wondered if this was exactly the dream she had in mind. Gone were the days of athleticism and artistry. Hollywood on Ice was half Disney, half Playboy. The skaters apply false eyelashes the size of caterpillars and wriggle into progressively more revealing costumes. Some performers dress up as animals; some real animals actually skate. The undeniable showstopper was the Michael Jackson number, starring a middle-aged blonde with a beer belly that is barely contained by his flashy spandex costume. Bertine was no quitter, and she stuck it out-with laugh-out-loud humor and unfailing grace. But as she came to fully understand the differences between showbiz and sports, Bertine had to make the hardest choice of her life. Anyone who has known-or dreamed of becoming-a skater, dancer, or professional athlete will find here a poignant, funny, and utterly winning story of a young woman's courage, resolve, and grace under pressure. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)796.912092Arts & recreation Sports, games & entertainment Athletic and outdoor sports and games Winter sports Ice skating Figure skatingLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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