This is a great book. 3 stars is a good score for
me.
My main criticism is that there is not enough detail about her early swimming career. In a swimming biography, readers really want to know the details- how she worked her way up, what events she swam, what times she was doing in the various events as a young swimmer. More detail on training schedules, yardage, stroke development etc would be useful. Also, she says things like about taking her nutrition seriously for the first time but doesn't say a single word about what was involved.
It is as if she has been told to tone down the swimming details to make it appeal to a wider audience, but that diluted the interest for swimming fans.
I wasn't overly keen on the chronological back and forth. And massive things were only mentioned several chapters and gold medals in - like living with her brother's situation, like having asthma and scoliosis.
However, there are some really great anecdotes - I just love it when she was in the ready room, due to race Phelps in the first mixed relay races.
She's hilarious, asking him, for jokes, if he's gonna bring it??? etc but he's just blanks her!!! Very interesting account of London 2012 being a real low point for the Australian swimming team.
Very good on conveying the swimmer's mindset- the single mindedness, the focus, the determination, the physical endurance every day, the need to win (and the consequent inability to gain much satisfaction from it) the tip over into depression...
LT also has a fault line that most others don't- the people pleasing, and a terribly critical internal voice that tells her she's a worthless loser if something tiny doesn't go to plan.
Excellent achingly raw honest account of sleep deprivation and post natal depression.
Excellent understanding why her coach's decision to allow her rival to join the team was so painful- because Stephan was like a father figure and it felt like her father rejecting her