Disclaimer: I received this book as part of the GoodReads First Reads program.
This book tells the story of a woman who falls in love with the idea of rowing after seeing rowers one year as a young girl. When she goes to college, she discovers that there's a woman's rowing team and she tries out for and becomes a member of the team, over the coaches objections that she's too small. She rise to the varsity quickly and is a member of one of the best woman's rowing teams in the country. After graduation, she continues her pursuit to represent the USA in the Olympics as a single sculler rower and doesn't succeed, but does get on the quad team, which wins a silver medal.
The descriptions of training, of pushing oneself beyond what is thought possible and the details of racing are all exciting and very interesting. The problem for me occurs in the long whiny descriptions of her personal life. The divorce of her parents, the decision to break up with her "one true love", another woman rower, all her personal demons, leaving her husband for another woman, thus breaking up two families, an endless litany of problems that all come of as the "white man's problems" of an entitled, self-pitying, self-important rich bitch who justifies ruining other people's lives with the mantra "the heart wants what the heart wants". I started the book liking the athlete and ended it despising the person.