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Frozen in Time: The Enduring Legacy of the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Team (2006)

por Nikki Nichols

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5820450,795 (3.39)13
On February 15, 1961, all 18 members of the U.S. World Figure Skating Team were killed in a plane crash, along with 16 coaches, officials, and family members.Frozen in Time takes readers inside the lives of the young skaters who died in the crash, revealing their friendships, romances, rivalries, sacrifices, and triumphs. The dramatic focus lingers on two families of powerful women: the Owens and the Westerfelds. Maribel Owen, the most famous woman in figure skating at the time, relentlessly drives her two young daughters--pairs champion Mara and the spectacular Laurence, who graced the cover ofSports Illustrated on the day she died. Myra Westerfeld, meanwhile, loses her marriage while guiding her daughters Sherri and Steffi to the pinnacle of the sport. Along with the bittersweet personal stories, author Nikki Nichols recounts the U.S. skating program's lengthy struggle to rebuild after this devastating accident.… (más)
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Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
When the author uses the phrase "frozen in time" as part of the title, it implies that the skaters who perished are forever left as young, nimble athletes. Sadly, they have also become a part of the forgotten past, one which should be resurrected. With all the real-life films we have about tragic sporting events, it would be a wonderful opportunity to see these skating heroes be remembered for their promise, as well as the devastation their deaths wreaked on U.S. figure skating. Nichols book brought me an awareness of people and their stories that should not be forgotten. ( )
  jap9963 | Feb 16, 2013 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This book is an amateur historian's labor of love: A story about a group of people, a sport, and a time for which she obviously has enormous affection. It's untainted by any sense of perspective, proportion, or any of the larger contexts into which it might have been fitted. All the skaters profiled are -- to hear the author tell it -- flawless human beings: charming, decorous, polite, well-mannered, sportsmanlike. The world in which they competed is a kind of lost Golden Age -- so far removed from the high-intensity world that is competitive figure skating today that they almost seem to be competing in a different sport altogether.

Nikki Nichols' nostalgia for that era -- its greater formality, its more sedate routines, its styling of the female skaters as "ladies," and the conceptualization of both male and female skaters as performers more than athletes -- is palpable, and for a while it's intriguing (even charming) in its intense earnestness. After a while, though, I found it limiting, and frustrating: I wanted Nichols to drop back a bit, pull back her focus, show how the culture of the figure skating world reflected the time, the place, and the socio-economic world in which it grew.

I also found myself wanting to see more about the inevitable climax that hangs over the story, from the beginning, like a dark cloud: The plane crash that killed virtually everyone in the book in 1961. Nichols -- taking a page from Sebastian Junger's final chapter in The Perfect Storm -- imagines what the crash might have been like, but there (again) she stops. What did Americans outside the figure skating world make of the crash (if anything)? How did sports journalists cover it? How was the story framed, before the rise of Peggy Fleming to stardom in the mid-1960s created the perfect coda to it?

On all that, Nichols is silent . . . it's not the story she wants to tell, any more than the larger, dispassionately analyzed story of figure skating in 1961 is the story she wants to tell. The story she does want to tell is there on the page, in gushing, breathless, resolutely uncritical prose -- and, if you share her enthusiasm for that quieter, more genteel world of sport, you'll love it. ( )
  ABVR | Mar 6, 2012 |
Frozen in Time" is a well researched and well written look at the entire U.S. Skating team that was killed in a 1961 plane crash in Brussels. Author Nikki Nichols focuses mostly on the Owen family (nine time National Champion Maribel Vinson Owen and her daughters, "Little Maribel" and newly crowned National Champion, 16 year old Laurence) and Stephanie Westerfield, Laurence's closest rival and her sister Sharon. The book also gives insight into what skating was like at that time, with detailed explanations of elements such as school figures which are no longer included in competitions and the different competitions themselves, including the North American Championships which no longer exists. Finally, the book also talks about the devastating affect the deaths had on family members left behind as well as how the deaths forever changed the United States figure skating program.

Although I was just a baby when it happened, I'm a long time figure skating fan and I grew up hearing about the plane crash and wondered what had happened. This long overdue remembrance is a poignant read and by the end readers will feel as if they knew each skater. Nikki Nichols intersperses the history of skating with her narration, including the fact that 1961 was the first time Nationals was shown on television (although on tape, not live). Nichols also compares skating then to skating now and skating fans probably won't be too surprised to learn that even back in 1961 Maribel Owen was fighting corrupt judges. The book is full of pictures and many of them are haunting, such as the team posing for pictures on the steps of the doomed plane; a burnt skate; the charred copy of Sports Illustrated with Laurence Owen on the cover; and the ever present smile of Laurence.

If the book falters anywhere, it's when Nichols tries to imagine what the atmosphere on the doomed plane was. Of course, no one can know what conversations took place on the flight and Nichols valiant attempt doesn't work and tends to be over dramatic. I also wish the section dealing with the rebuilding of the U.S. Skating team had been a bit longer.

Still, these minor flaws shouldn't keep anyone from reading this excellent book. ( )
  drebbles | Nov 6, 2009 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
"Frozen in Time" is a great tribute to a not very well known (outside of skating circles, at least) group of skaters and how they died before they achieved all they could. The book especially focuses Laurence Owen and Stephanie Westerfeld.

The author Nikki Nichols gives a wonderful view into their lives, what they gave up
in order to skate comptetively and what their lives outside of skating were like. Some of the conversations must be fictional accounts, but I didn't find this bothersome.

Even for someone who doesn't follow the skating world, this but is an enthralling
look into the lives of this very appealing group of young skaters.

One great thing about the 'net is that on YouTube, you can see some of the performances mentioned in the book. ( )
  wdavidlewis | Oct 25, 2009 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I really liked how "Frozen in Time" described the world of figure skating and the lives of the skaters of the time. As a fan of figure skating, I enjoyed reading about them. However, as another reviewer mentioned, I did not like the speculative chapter of what the passengers were doing on board the plane prior to the crash. I also hoped that more time would have been spent on the crash itself and the aftermath. Perhaps, how the surviving families managed to go on with their lives after such a terrible tragedy. Frozen in Time is a good non-fiction read, especially for fans of the sport of figure skating. ( )
  TheTrueBookAddict | Oct 3, 2009 |
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This is a poem by Laurence Owen, one of those who died in the airplane crash. It has a prescient quality to it. It actually appears at the end, but qualifies as an epigraph in any case.

Awakening

Across our world the sunset shadows fell.

The day was gone, the light was ere to die,

And from this twilight gloom a girl arose,

Shed of her robe of life, and clad alone

In ghostly gown she trod these shadows quick.

Softly, o softly, she led those shadows

Across the sky and down a darkened valley.

Wings of night far outspread her hurrying feet

Encompassing the dying light. At last

She stopped, and sank exhausted from her plight.

Death she laid around her, and doom was near,

And all seemed o'er, yet all was just begun.

For like a falling star whose million lights

Reflect a velvet sky, whose wreathed tips

Cast haunting glow--so shone eternity

Through the night, a challenge to her spirit.

Hope, redeeming saviour, rose within her--

The clarion voice of heaven. It swelled

Until it broke the vision of eternal night.

And peace came, and with it unknown beauty.

For now, at last, she knew dawn's light...

God's love.

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Dedicated to the members of the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Team, their coaches, the officials, and the loving family members who died in the crash of Sabena Flight 548, and to everyone who works to preserve their memory.

The biggest "thank you" of all to my parents, Michael and Catherine Nichols, who supported me throughout this endeavor in countless ways, and to my beloved husband, pairs partner, and friend, Michael J. Cunningham, who believes in me as a writer, skater, and person.
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"Every time I lace a pair of figure skates and take to the ice, a corner of my heart aches for the skaters of the 1961 U.S. figure skating team."
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On February 15, 1961, all 18 members of the U.S. World Figure Skating Team were killed in a plane crash, along with 16 coaches, officials, and family members.Frozen in Time takes readers inside the lives of the young skaters who died in the crash, revealing their friendships, romances, rivalries, sacrifices, and triumphs. The dramatic focus lingers on two families of powerful women: the Owens and the Westerfelds. Maribel Owen, the most famous woman in figure skating at the time, relentlessly drives her two young daughters--pairs champion Mara and the spectacular Laurence, who graced the cover ofSports Illustrated on the day she died. Myra Westerfeld, meanwhile, loses her marriage while guiding her daughters Sherri and Steffi to the pinnacle of the sport. Along with the bittersweet personal stories, author Nikki Nichols recounts the U.S. skating program's lengthy struggle to rebuild after this devastating accident.

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