This is part of a series, so if you haven’t read the earlier installments, definitely do so, as Sophie’s journey as the first female hockey player in the NHL is immersive and will alternatively break your heart and soothe your soul. I am not a hockey person-- not even a sports person-- but the way the author describes the team dynamics and the intricacies of the plays somehow draws me in nonetheless. For me, however, the real heart of this novel, and the series as a whole, is Sophie herself: her determination, her strength, and her ability to persevere in the face of deeply entrenched ignorance, bias, and misogyny. In this novel, Sophie is a successful team captain with championship cred. She just wants to be paid the salary she’s worth, have the respect she’s earned from her coach and team management, and find support from those who should be closest to her. She wants these things, and she deserves them, but she doesn’t get them-- her father, her coach, the press, and even members of the team she loves and leads so well let her down. Heartbreakingly, she even gets flak from Lexie, another woman in the league for not pushing hard enough, getting paid enough, or being taken seriously enough. There’s something poignantly awful about Lexie’s inability to recognize the ways she’s benefited from the battles Sophie has fought and keeps fighting, and it breaks me every time. It’s not all bad for Sophie, however-- she has hockey, which she loves, good teammates as well as bad, some true friends, and of course Elsa, the teammate, possibly soulmate, who bolsters her when she needs it the most. So even when things go bad (and they sometimes do, so brace yourself) she’s not alone, and she’s never truly defeated. I deeply love this series, and I cannot wait to see where it goes next.
*I received an ARC of this book and voluntarily composed an honest review.