Sometimes making history means breaking some rules
This is a gripping historical fiction novel about bravery, hard work, the quest for success and two women's stand against prejudice in all its forms, perfect for fans of Kate Quinn, Sadeqa Johnson and Dolen Perkins-Valdez.New York, 1950. Ambitious journalist Hettie Carlin is reeling from a scandal and desperate for a scoop to salvage her career. When her boss tasks her with covering the meteoric rise of Althea Gibson, the tennis worlds newest star, theres just two problems: Hettie knows nothing about tennis. Plus, her and Althea have a history and its not pretty.
Hettie must convince a media-sceptic Althea Gibson to allow Hettie back into her life, and it wont be an easy feat. But, as Altheas star rises and she challenges the status quo, she faces media bias, tennis establishment prejudice, and discrimination head-on and Althea soon realises she may just need Hettie, too, in order to tell her own story on her own terms.
When Althea becomes an unexpected civil rights icon, the pair realise their partnership transcends tennis, holding the potential to change history. If they can work together, they may just help revolutionize more than just the sport once and for all
Don't miss the powerful new historical fiction novel Inspired by the incredible true story of Althea Gibson, the first Black athlete to win a Grand Slam title in 1956.
Genre: Historical
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