Lauren Fleshman is one of the most decorated American distance runners of all time, having won five NCAA championships at Stanford University and two national championships as a professional. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times and Runner's World. She is the brand strategy advisor for Oiselle, a fitness apparel company for women, and the cofounder of Picky Bars, a natural food company. She lives in Bend, Oregon, with her husband, triathlete Jesse Thomas, and their two children.
A close-up look at the uncertain and often unhealthy climb toward
stardom for women in organized sports . . . The rawness of Good for
a Girl serves as a push to demand that the next crop of female
athletes has it better
*Washington Post*
Fleshman manages to deliver a sporting manifesto while also being a
fine and engaging writer ... There is a raw honesty at the heart of
Good for a Girl
*The Times*
I tore through Lauren Fleshman's Good for a Girl. This is the book
we've been waiting for: a coming-of-age story, told from inside our
broken sports system-a system that was not built for the young
athletes inside it, and certainly not for young women. Lauren's
story is clear-eyed, passionate, nuanced, and unflinching; it will
change the way you look at sports
*Kate Fagan, author of What Made Maddy Run*
This book breaks open the door for caged conversations to protect
the health and integrity of growing athletes. It not only needs to
be in the hands of women-identifying athletes, but also their
peers, coaches, and parents. It is the invitation to have a long
overdue conversation for a long overdue cultural shift
*Alysia Montaño, Olympian, co-founder of &Mother, and author of
Feel-Good Fitness*
Women's sports have needed a manifesto for a very long time, and
with Lauren Fleshman's Good for a Girl we finally have one
*Malcolm Gladwell, author of Outliers and David and Goliath*
Good for a Girl is much more than a great running memoir. It's a
remarkably candid tale of self-doubt and self-belief; of
entrepreneurship, family, money, competition,
and-importantly-female physiology. (Turns out women are not just
smaller men!) It's an important book that also happens to be a
page-turner
*David Epstein, bestselling author of Range and The Sports
Gene*
Good for a Girl is simultaneously a moving memoir and a call to
action in how we think about-and train-girls and women in elite
sports. It's a must-read-for anyone who loves running, for anyone
who has a daughter, and for anyone who cares about creating a
better future for young women
*Emily Oster, author of Expecting Better, Cribsheet, and The Family
Firm*
If someone held a gun to my head and said 'Run,' I'd say, 'Nah,
just shoot me.' And yet I could not put down Lauren Fleshman's
thoughtful, elegant memoir: a necessary look at what women endure
and deserve from the sports they devote their lives to
*Ariel Levy, author of The Rules Do Not Apply*
Part memoir, part critique of a sports system built around a man's
body, Fleshman offers a searingly candid look at her own victimhood
and complicity, interlaced with compelling data and concrete ideas
on how we can change this environment . . . Fleshman is an
undeniably masterful storyteller, owning her own complicity in the
system while holding others accountable, in a loving and nuanced
way
*Women's Running*
Good for a Girl is in part a memoir of Fleshman's failures and
successes, but it's also a call to action for the coaches, parents,
and young women of future athletic generations. Fleshman argues
convincingly that it's essential for the sports world to
disentangle physical suffering from self-worth. In 288 funny,
honest, and sometimes-wrenching pages, she makes clear that
empowering girls to better understand the need for balance between
pain and elite performance is not only the ethical thing to do -
it's essential to their health and career longevity
*Atlantic*
Punchy, pacy and eye-opening, Good For A Girl is a book that needed
to be written, and that needs to be read by anyone involved in
women's sport
*Adharanand Finn, author of The Rise of the Ultra Runners*
Lauren Fleshman's Good for a Girl is a lyrical, insightful, and
timely meditation on women's sports, women's bodies, and the
fundamental issues of social justice exposed and unsolved in the
world of elite athletics. As someone who finds no joy in movement,
I was moved and riveted from start to finish. A must-read for
anybody
*Kate Manne, author of Down Girl and Entitled*
Lauren Fleshman serves as a guide to two worlds unknown to most of
us: elite athletics, but also, and more importantly, the unjust
system that gifts men with riches and fame but crushes the hopes
and bodies of women. She is both a champion and a survivor, and
anyone who cares about running, athletics, or women must listen to
her
*Peter Sagal, host of Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me! and author of The
Incomplete Book of Running*
Lauren Fleshman fills us with righteous fury for the way women's
sport has treated its athletes, and then offers us hope for the
future. I finished this invigorating book feeling that I could take
on the world - and that I had been handed some tools to get me
started
*Emily Chappell, author of What Goes Around and Where There's a
Will*
A moving coming-of-age memoir . . . The fast-paced, smoothly
written narrative will resonate with student-athletes and is highly
recommended for everyone involved with female athletes, from
coaches to parents. Fleshman is a role model unafraid to share her
vulnerability and advocate for gender equality
*Booklist, STARRED REVIEW*
A superb memoir . . . [Fleshman] fearlessly exposes the often dark,
demanding underbelly of female sports and how she believes it needs
to be reformed . . . [Her] discussion of physiology and sports
psychology enhance Fleshman's impassioned, deeply personal
narrative. She beautifully balances the book with equal parts joy
and victory, pain and heartache. Good for a Girl is a necessary,
important read that will enlighten athletes of all genders, their
coaches and those who cheer for them
*Shelf Awareness*
As [Fleshman] lays bare the price women pay for success in an
athletic system that still favors males, she offers a thoughtful,
much-needed plea for a more humane, gender-neutral sporting system.
Inspirational and impassioned
*Kirkus*
Motivational . . . [Fleshman's] raw honesty when it comes to often
taboo topics for professional female athletes (including
menstruation and mental health struggles) is refreshing, as is her
willingness to confront the ways professional racing 'folds and
smashes women and girls into a male-based infrastructure.'
Fleshman's determination stokes the competitive spirit in this
rousing call to action
*Publishers Weekly*
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