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Drei Heldinnen der Geschichte und ihr Traum vom Laufen als Weg zur Freiheit
1936 – trotz aller Vorbehalte gegen die Teilnahme von Frauen gelingt es drei jungen Amerikanerinnen, mit dem Olympischen Team nach Berlin zu Betty Robinson muss sich nach einem schweren Unfall an die Spitze zurückkämpfen. Die burschikose Außenseiterin Helen Stephens träumt davon, sich als Sprinterin zu beweisen. Und die Schwarze Louise Stokes sieht im Laufen ihre Chance, trotz ihrer Hautfarbe endlich Anerkennung zu finden. Doch als die drei in der hochbrisanten Atmosphäre Berlins um den Titel der schnellsten Frau der Welt laufen wollen, müssen sie erfahren, dass Leistung nicht das Einzige ist, was zählt ...
Die unglaubliche Geschichte dreier Frauen, die antraten, um die Welt zu verändern.
465 pages, Kindle Edition
First published July 7, 2020
Hooper is a good writer and she does a good job of bringing us into the world of running competitions in the late 1920's and 1930's. She focuses on three runners: Helen Stephens, Betty Robinson, and Louise Stokes, exploring each girls home and family life in the years before the 1936 Olympics. She makes us root for them and rage against the injustices they faced. Although it all happened more than ninety years ago, the battles they fought are still raging today: women's rights, racial injustice, even LGBT issues are part of the story of these three women.
Elise Hooper does a good job of melding historical facts with imagined behavior, as far as readability is concerned. But I think she crosses the line a few times, imagining more than she should, even changing facts to make a better story. For instance, in the afterward she admits that Helen Stephen's father wasn't as mean as she made him in the novel. She made Stephens and another farmer in Helen's town into a caricatures of mean and ignorant hillbillies. When real people are used in fiction, I believe writers have a responsibility to be fair and honest as much as possible.