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Course Correction: A Story of Rowing and Resilience in the Wake of Title IX

por Ginny Gilder

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
5921435,513 (3.7)6
"This story is rooted in the power of sport, but it is not a sports memoir. Yes, Course Correction chronicles one young woman's transformation from a couch potato-in-training into an elite athlete who reached the highest echelon of her sport. In addition, the book offers a persuasive example of the enormous impact of sports participation on the rest of life and validates the power, import, and necessity of Title IX. Just like Ginny, girls everywhere deserve the chance not only to dream of athletic stardom, but to reach for it. Ginny discovered rowing as a freshman at Yale. From her first strokes as a novice, Ginny found herself in a new world. Starting with her first practice, she trained alongside two Olympics-bound rowers. Then a mere handful of months into her freshman year, she participated in the now renowned Title IX naked protest on campus. That event not only forced Yale to provide equal access to sports facilities for its women athletes, but helped mold the future of women's crew programs across the country. Course Correction recounts the physical and psychological barriers Ginny had to confront and overcome to achieve the extraordinary. Taking place against a backdrop of unprecedented cultural change, Ginny's story personalizes the impact of Title IX, demonstrating the life-changing effects of lessons learned in sports far beyond the athletic fields of play. Her journey wends its way to the Olympic podium in 1984, detouring through the 1980 Olympics, which the United States boycotted at then-president Jimmy Carter's insistence, carries her through family tragedy, strengthens her to face her own demons and truths, and ultimately frees her to live her life despite her persistent fear of loss"--… (más)
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» Ver también 6 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 23 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
Good book. I had a little trouble getting started with it, but once I did, I found it quite interesting. I had previously read Boys in the Boat, which had given me some perspective about rowing as a sport and made further . The description of the struggle to truly implement Title IX and the attempts to sidestep it were quite interesting. Her personal struggles were also, but I didn't think they were as well articulated. ( )
  Suusan | May 31, 2017 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I received this book as an early reviewer. It provided a good historical perspective about the wake of Title IX and how women had to fight to receive equal funding as their male counterparts. I learned a lot about rowing and the teamwork involved with the crew. ( )
  DianneBottinelli | Feb 11, 2017 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I found this book very interesting. Gilder's family history left her somewhat self-destructive as she let her fear that she might become like her mother rule her. She would practice even when her doctor and coach told her not to, that she needed to rest her body so she could be healthy for rowing trials. She didn't say how her parents took her coming out as gay, but then her relationship with her mother was distant at best while her father was brusque but supportive. I kept reading to find out how she reached the Olympics and the races put her crew in Silver medal position. I also liked the way she titled the sections of the book; Catch, Drive, Release, and Recovery, the terms for the different parts of a stroke. ( )
  lisa.schureman | Feb 7, 2017 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I was lucky enough to grow up in an era after Title IX so I never had to worry about whether or not I could participate in the sport of my choice. For me, that sport wasn't rowing; it was swimming. Despite not ever rowing beyond banging about in a rowboat as opposed to a scull, I have always been incredibly intrigued by it. I gobbled up The Boys in the Boat and wished again that I was not too old to try to take up rowing. I know; it's never too old to learn something but I suspect that anyone seeing my rotund, short self trundling down to get in a boat with them would be flat out horrified. Instead, I just find books to feed my interest and Course Correction, Ginny Gilder's memoir about rowing, Title IX, and her Olympic dreams and experience, fit the bill for sure.

Ginny Gilder fell in love with rowing when she was sixteen and saw a race on the Charles River. Completely hooked, when she went off to Yale, she was determined to have the chance to row. Not everything in her life was as easy as that decision (and achieving that one was by no means easy either). Rowing in the age just after the passing of Title IX, Gilder's path to a rowing shell was complicated and often unhappy. She came from a terribly dysfunctional family and had an unhappy childhood she desperately wanted to escape. Finding rowing, she found something she could pour her entire heart and soul into even as she had to fight the sexism of fellow athletes and coaches, fight her own personal demons, and fight the injuries that threatened to derail her secret dream: to row in the Olympics. Then she still had to endure world politics when we boycotted the 1980 Olympics.

Starting in the 70s, this memoir is both a very personal story for Gilder and a history of what Title IX has meant for all the women who have followed its passing. It is a testament to the powerful way that sports can impact a life. Gilder's story of her quest to become an Olympian, the way she pushes her body beyond, and her fierce determination to win and to come back after an injury interweaves with her own self-realization, an awakening to who she really is, going far beyond her amazing athletic career. She traces the roots of those things that hold her back and chronicles how she first pushes past them and then circles back to examine them closely. Sometimes this introspection and examination of her self doubt slows the narrative down a little too much. It is a testament to Gilder's spirit and the many course corrections she undertook along the way that she overcame such a troubled childhood and the inertia of a life she created but that wasn't the right life to ultimately find a contentment and a mission supporting women's sports. Gilder tackles the many social issues that shaped and continue to shape her life: infidelity, alcoholism, sexism, and homosexuality to name a few. And she holds the politics of sport up to the light. This is a celebration of not only rowing and reaching her dream but of accepting her life and who she is. Sports fans and those with a keen interest in the impact of Title IX will find this a fascinating read. ( )
  whitreidtan | Nov 16, 2016 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I received this book for free through LibraryThing's Early Reviewers.

This is not typically a book I would read. I'm from California, so rowing is not a big sport here. I also had never heard of Ginny Gilder before either.

I was pleasantly surprised by this book. It was incredibly well written. It was a bit melodramatic at times. I found the parts about her personal life to be more interesting than the parts on her rowing life and career. This is probably because I know very little about rowing. Speaking of her family life, her childhood reminded me of Melanie Martinez’s song “Dollhouse”. That song features an alcoholic mom and a cheating dad, which is what happens to Ginny’s parents.

Overall, this book showcases what it was like being a female athlete in the early days of Title IX. In addition it also highlights struggling with sexuality. ( )
  oddandbookish | Jun 8, 2016 |
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"This story is rooted in the power of sport, but it is not a sports memoir. Yes, Course Correction chronicles one young woman's transformation from a couch potato-in-training into an elite athlete who reached the highest echelon of her sport. In addition, the book offers a persuasive example of the enormous impact of sports participation on the rest of life and validates the power, import, and necessity of Title IX. Just like Ginny, girls everywhere deserve the chance not only to dream of athletic stardom, but to reach for it. Ginny discovered rowing as a freshman at Yale. From her first strokes as a novice, Ginny found herself in a new world. Starting with her first practice, she trained alongside two Olympics-bound rowers. Then a mere handful of months into her freshman year, she participated in the now renowned Title IX naked protest on campus. That event not only forced Yale to provide equal access to sports facilities for its women athletes, but helped mold the future of women's crew programs across the country. Course Correction recounts the physical and psychological barriers Ginny had to confront and overcome to achieve the extraordinary. Taking place against a backdrop of unprecedented cultural change, Ginny's story personalizes the impact of Title IX, demonstrating the life-changing effects of lessons learned in sports far beyond the athletic fields of play. Her journey wends its way to the Olympic podium in 1984, detouring through the 1980 Olympics, which the United States boycotted at then-president Jimmy Carter's insistence, carries her through family tragedy, strengthens her to face her own demons and truths, and ultimately frees her to live her life despite her persistent fear of loss"--

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