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Lynn Ames

Auteur van The Price of Fame

21+ Werken 449 Leden 11 Besprekingen

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Werken van Lynn Ames

The Price of Fame (2004) 57 exemplaren
The Cost of Commitment (2004) 49 exemplaren
The Value of Valor (2005) 49 exemplaren
All That Lies Within (2013) 44 exemplaren
Heartsong (2007) 39 exemplaren
The Flip Side of Desire (2006) 37 exemplaren
Eyes on the Stars (2010) 31 exemplaren
Beyond Instinct (2011) 23 exemplaren
Outsiders (2009) 22 exemplaren
Above Reproach (2012) 21 exemplaren
One Love (2010) 16 exemplaren
Great Bones (2018) 13 exemplaren
46 (2020) 12 exemplaren
Final Cut (Kate & Jay) (2016) 8 exemplaren
Secrets Well Kept (2019) 7 exemplaren
Bright Lights of Summer (2014) 7 exemplaren
Chain Reactions (2019) 5 exemplaren
Final cut (2016) 2 exemplaren

Gerelateerde werken

Call of the Dark: Erotic Lesbian Tales of the Supernatural (2005) — Medewerker — 31 exemplaren
Romance for Life (2006) — Medewerker — 28 exemplaren

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Real Rating: 4.25* of five

The Publisher Says: “Dot Wilkinson is the greatest female catcher ever to play softball . A bold, pioneering athlete, she refused to let others define her and instead defined herself. Her story is an inspiration to people everywhere.” — Billie Jean King, Sports Icon and Champion for Equality

It’s not simply that Dot Wilkinson was one of the most decorated women’s softball players, bowlers, and athletes of all time and one of the original players from the three-time-world-champion PBSW Phoenix Ramblers softball team (1933–1965). Nor was it the length of her time here on Earth—over a century—although any of these things by itself would be impressive.

The magic of Dot’s story is in the details. It’s the tale of a childhood spent in poverty, an indomitable, unbreakable spirit, a determination to be the very best to play whatever sport she undertook, the independence to live her personal life on her own terms, and her tremendous success at all of it.

Over more than a decade of countless conversations and interviews, Dot shared all of it with her dear friend, author Lynn Ames. Dot held nothing back. Out at the Plate , told through the lens of Dot and Lynn’s friendship, is the story of a forgotten era in women’s history and sports, and one extraordinary woman’s place at the center of it all.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. THANK YOU.

My Review
: I had a lesbian "grandma" of sorts, older than Dot Wilkinson, but with the same kind of unwillingness to submit to woman=weakness stereotyping. She saw what she wanted and went out of all ladylike bounds to get it. This included the love of her life, a widow with a son, and the family they made.

Dot Wilkinson is my kinda woman. (Or man, if I'm honest.) Reading about her life, its ups-downs-failures and unimaginably exciting successes, made me smile uncontrollably. QUILTBAG folk are fed a steady diet of disaster and crime with us as the victims, expecting that this will keep us quiet and invisible. This is the classic Linebarger tactic, used for generations now on "minorities" of all sorts. It is now modulated by stories of assimilation, of increased access to "The American Dream" of mortgaged house, kids who need college funds, etc etc. The Dot Wilkinsons who decide to do what the hell they want to do when they want to do it do not, oddly enough, get a lot of overcultural attention.

I can't think why this should be.

Dot Wilkinson deserves every bit of attention you have at your command because she actually was what we're told we love the most, should strive to be, here in the USA. She was strong by every metric, she was a maverick. She was routinely successful in her careers (plural). She lived with the love of her life for almost a half-century. Her example of grace and graciousness under pressure is one to emulate. She never turned it into any kind of doormat behavior. She was likable and well-liked at a time when her rejection of "normative womanhood" could easily have made her a pariah. Lynn Ames manages to convey all this without becoming cloying, though her fangirling over Dot is not at all veiled...or misplaced.

The one thing that leads to, on the "missing three-quarters-star" front, is the tendency to overexplain and repeat. By using many primary sources, Author Ames falls into the "it's really cool how much stuff there is" ditch and doesn't climb out. The sources very often concur, and maybe picking one quote then saying "this is one of the half-dozen angles on this story" could've been less wearing on the reader's nerve. My interest in softball, Dot's biggest claim to Fame and spotlights, is significantly less than hers....

Family issues weren't minimized. It was heartbreaking to learn of Dot's first love's early passing from the then-untreatable scourge of metastatic breast cancer. It was more heartbreaking still to read of Dot's mother's callous...let me be fair, surprisingly insensitive...response to Dot's deep grief at her loss. The fact is a sapphic love wouldn't register with most people as "real" in that day and time, so grief of that depth and duration would seem odd. Still, it's your child! Wouldn't that attune you to the reality of the feeling and thus summon up empathy not dismissiveness?

Apparently not. And honestly that bit upset me as much as the loss did. I was, as you can tell from that, fully invested in Dot Wilkinson's life, and was very, very happy I had this chance to learn about this older sister in queerness. I hope you will give it a chance to grab you, too.
… (meer)
½
 
Gemarkeerd
richardderus | May 29, 2024 |
meh. Didn't love it.
 
Gemarkeerd
Karenbenedetto | Jun 14, 2023 |
I'd probably go 3.5 if it was available. Very sweet romance with some angels and hollywood movie creation. Well written, too!
 
Gemarkeerd
amcheri | 3 andere besprekingen | Jan 5, 2023 |
This book... It would have had a lot of potential, but it honestly disappointed me.

It's about Emma McMasters, the 46th President of the United States of America. Not only is she the first woman to hold that office, but she's also the first queer woman. And then there's Palmer Estes, the highest-ranking female general in the US Army. That also sounds quite exciting and immediately drew me in. But then it started... Countless names and titles/ranks kept popping up. Every single person who was in the President's room was mentioned. So the author listed each person by first and last name, PLUS their rank. Imagine that with eight people or more in each chapter.

The whole thing got a bit wordy, and it was all far too detailed for my taste. Besides, most of the characters had absolutely nothing to do with the plot. And then there were all those long speeches by Emma...

At the same time, the author told the "romance" between the main characters extremely quickly. Suddenly they were head over heels in love and making plans for the future. Huh? Did I miss something? Also, in my opinion, the author didn't develop the two main characters properly.

I am also very sorry because I had high expectations for this book. This story was not for me.

___
Check out my blog www.wordsandfiction.com to find more reviews.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
wordsandfiction | 1 andere bespreking | Mar 5, 2022 |

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Statistieken

Werken
21
Ook door
2
Leden
449
Populariteit
#54,622
Waardering
½ 3.7
Besprekingen
11
ISBNs
36

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