My fight Your fight

Ronda Rousey

Book - 2015

The undefeated UFC champion and Hollywood star charts her difficult journey to fame, revealing her tragic childhood, her secrets behind her achievements and her experiences as pioneering woman athlete.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Regan Arts 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Ronda Rousey (author)
Other Authors
Maria Burns Ortiz (author)
Edition
First Regan Arts hardcover edition
Physical Description
xv, 301 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781941393260
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The mixed martial arts champion offers guidance like a particularly intense version of Dr. Phil. Two-time Olympian "Rowdy" Rousey, who was the first American woman to earn an Olympic medal in judo (in Beijing in 2008), is a titleholder and pioneer in MMA, a full-contact combat sport that is rapidly gaining in popularity. Yet, despite her fearsome image and dominance in the arena, she tells readers on Page 1, "I am vulnerable; that's why I fight." Throughout the book, the author's writing reveals her fighter's mentality. In the chapter "Pain Is Just One Piece of Information," she urges readers not "to allow pain to dictate [your] decision-making" and tells the shocking story of how she once popped her dislocated elbow back into place during a matchand before the end of the round. Though her statement "when I lose, I mourn a piece of me dying" might seem like an overstatement, it reflects the intense passion (a major motif throughout) and self-applied pressure that make her a champion. Similar, but tamer, adages appear in dozens of business and self-help books, but Rousey offers them in her take-no-prisoners style. Her experiences and storytelling are engrossing and entertaining, but her narration loses steam as the book progresses and she shifts focus from tough-talk adages and encouragement ("To get anything of real value, you have to fight for it") to recaps of each of her professional MMA battles. The book is just too long; it could have been more than 50 pages shorter, and Rousey would still have inspired her readers. But her warrior mentality is always evident, and one of her more helpful pieces of advice is to feel angry, not sad, after a loss. She urges would-be elite athletesand really, anyoneto set goals, then become obsessed with elevating them. Plainspoken, often repetitive, and always fiery. Rousey is a fierce yet endearing role modeland a woman possessed. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.