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Dare to Make History

Chasing a Dream and Fighting for Equity

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
The Lamoureux twins led the US women's ice hockey team to its first Olympic gold medal in twenty years over arch rival Canada at the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea. Their story of personal grit and determination in the big business of elite international and Olympics sports gives voice to the struggle of female athletes in all sports—and beyond sports—to achieve parity with their male counterparts. From ice rinks to board rooms, the Lamoureux twins refuse to be denied their voice or their chance to help girls and women be victorious in the battle for gender equity.
Dare to Make History is the story of two courageous and talented women who weren't willing to accept anything less than being treated as equals. On their journey to a gold medal in women's ice hockey, they became role models for generations before and after them.
Twins Jocelyne Lamoureux-Davidson and Monique Lamoureux-Morando started playing ice hockey with their four older brothers and their friends on a frozen pond next to their home in North Dakota. No girls hockey teams, no problem―they just played on boys teams.
They went on to win six World Championships and played in three Olympics, winning two silver medals and ultimately a gold medal in South Korea in 2018 for the USA Women's National Team.
They did not allow roadblocks and discrimination deter them from taking on their governing body—USA Hockey—threatening to boycott the 2017 World Championships and jeopardizing their ability to compete in the 2018 Olympics unless their gender equity issues were addressed. The success of Monique, Jocelyne, and their team thrust them into the center of the struggle for gender equity, for women in hockey and in sports in general, as well as in society at large.
In Dare to Make History, the Lamoureux twins chronicle their journey to the pinnacle of their sport, their efforts along with almost 150 other hockey players to start a new professional women's hockey league, their training to come back and make another national team after giving birth, their tireless efforts to advance the interests of disadvantaged communities in closing the digital divide, and their ongoing contributions as role models championing the dreams of future generations of girls in sports, education, and the workplace.
This is not a hockey book. It is not a girls book. It is a book about the importance of the fight for equity, particularly gender equity. It is the inspirational story of how two young women from a small town in North Dakota have dreamed big—had the courage to take on huge battles—and in the end how they have dared to make history.
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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2021
      Two twins recount their glass ceiling-shattering careers in women's hockey in this debut memoir.Lamoureux-Davidson and Lamoureux-Morando started playing competitive hockey when they were 5 years old. They were something of a novelty: twin sisters competing with the boys because there were no girls teams, even in their hockey-obsessed hometown of Grand Forks, North Dakota. In the third grade, Lamoureux-Davidson turned in a school assignment that listed this among her dreams: "When I am seventeen years old, I want to be on the American or Canadian Olympic hockey team with my sister Monique." The girls would indeed go on to play for the American Olympic team, winning silver medals in 2010 and 2014 and bringing home the gold in 2018. For all these accomplishments, it is their work off the ice that they chose to highlight in this memoir: not only their efforts to succeed in a male-dominated sport, but also to change hockey so that the girls who came after them would have an easier time than they did. The twins' activism culminated in a battle with USA Hockey over equal rights for female athletes--a clash that almost led to a boycott of the 2017 World Championships. In between, their account covers the unlikely rise of not just one, but two world-class athletes and the colorful family that surrounded them. The authors split the storytelling duties, alternating between sections narrated from Lamoureux-Davidson's or Lamoureux-Morando's perspective. The prose is a bit stilted, but the content is often thoughtful. Here Lamoureux-Davidson remembers a meeting with USA Hockey: "One of the USA Hockey representatives talked about a USAH staff member's daughter and said because of her influence, he was passionate about 'the other side,' referring to us and women's hockey. I interrupted him. 'That is the problem right there,' I said. 'There are no sides.' " The book works as a traditional achievement memoir, but the advocacy of the authors--based in practical issues like a living wage and maternity leave--makes this a more pointedly feminist narrative than is normal for the genre. It is also the story of a remarkable friendship in which two sisters challenged and motivated each other to reach the top of their field.An inspiring sports account about doing your best while improving the game.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

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  • English

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