In These Girls, Hope is a Muscle

by Madeleine Blais

Paperback, 1996

Status

Available

Local notes

796.32 Bla

Barcode

5102

Collection

Publication

Grand Central Publishing (1996), Edition: Reissue, 272 pages

Description

Sports & Recreations. Nonfiction. HTML:"Beautifully written . . . A celebration of girls and athletics." The national bestselling sports classic from a Pulitzer Prize�??winning journalist (USA Today). Expanded and updated with a new epilogue, Madeleine Blais' book tells the story of a season in the life of the Amherst Lady Hurricanes, a girls' high school basketball team from the Western Massachusetts college town. The Hurricanes were a talented team with a near-perfect record, but for five straight years, when it came to the crunch of the playoffs, they somehow lacked the desire to go all the way. Now, led by senior guards Jen Pariseau, a three-point specialist, and Jamila Wideman, an All-American phenom, this was the year to prove themselves. It was a season to test their passion for the sport and their loyalty to each other, and a chance to discover who they really were. As an off-season of summer jobs and basketball camps turns to fall, as students arrive and the games begin, Blais charts the ups and downs of the team and paints a portrait of the wider Amherst community, which comes to revel in the athletic exploits of their girls. Finally, a women's team was getting the attention they deserve. And the Hurricanes were richly deserving; these teenage girls are fierce and funny, smart and ambitious, and they are the heart of this gripping book. "Extraordinary." �??The Baltimore Sun "A picture of a changing period in American sports history, when a town rallied around its female athletes in a way that had previously been reserved for males." �??Publishers We… (more)

Awards

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

272 p.; 5.25 inches

User reviews

LibraryThing member JeremyPreacher
I read this as a high schooler and adored it. I didn't grow up in precisely this environment, but it was damned close, and some of the descriptions of the girls could just as well have been about me and my friends. Particularly some of the hero-worshipping diary entries by younger girls about the
Show More
older ones - that was a huge part of my closeted baby-dyke experience.
Show Less

Pages

272

Rating

½ (30 ratings; 3.6)
Page: 1.2219 seconds