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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars the 99 World Cup final and history of the U.S. women's team
The Girls of Summer provides an in-depth look not only of the 1999 World Cup final match against China but also gives a good history of the U.S. women's national team. The book looks at brief parts of the game as they occurred and then breaks away from the game to fill in details about how a particular player or the team in general reached this moment in time...
Published on July 8, 2000 by Laura B. Riggs

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Pedestrian Account Of A Great Team and Victory
This is a competent account of the U.S. national women's soccer team and its victory in the 1999 Women's World Cup. Jere Longman structured the book around the final match with China. I suppose the idea was to build tension while flashing back to early matches and describing the players and the team in depth. I found the structure to be a major annoyance, however...
Published on July 24, 2000


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17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars the 99 World Cup final and history of the U.S. women's team, July 8, 2000
By 
Laura B. Riggs (San Antonio, TX USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The Girls of Summer provides an in-depth look not only of the 1999 World Cup final match against China but also gives a good history of the U.S. women's national team. The book looks at brief parts of the game as they occurred and then breaks away from the game to fill in details about how a particular player or the team in general reached this moment in time. Depsite breaking away from the action, it does give complete coverage to the game from their arrival at the Rose Bowl to the celebration in the locker room after the game. It provides a great deal of insight into the early struggles of the national team to their national glory in 1999. Although it is almost entirely about soccer, it does examine the struggle women in general have faced across the globe to be allowed to play sports. The story does not end with the victory against China. It also looks at the struggle the national team faced with the U.S. Soccer Federation after the tournament. The author has done a good job of including interviews and vignettes from many of the main players on the team. If you are looking for a simple recounting of the U.S. victory, this book is not for you. This book also does not provide much detail about the World Cup games leading up to the final. If you are looking for detailed coverage about how the U.S. team developed over the last 12 years, you will enjoy reading The Girls of Summer.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars At last, the definitive tale of THE sports story of '99...., July 10, 2000
By 
Paul R. Hanlin Jr. (Philadelphia, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Good things come to those who wait; that's what we're always told. The NY Times' chief Olympics writer comes through with a book that delivers what it promises - a description of every facet of the women's world cup tournament.

It shows just how much the national governing body of soccer disrespected them, from the coach on down, in the months after their win. The reservations which were expressed when Brandi Chastain posed for Gear Magazine with a strategically placed soccer ball. And the debunking once and for all of her "orchestrated" shirt-doffing at the end of the final by conspiracy theorists who've watched one too many Oliver Stone movies.

It also lets us in on just how much people in the U.S. news media were staggeringly asleep at the switch, when reporters had to <pay their own way> to cover the tournament and only later were refunded by their sports editors. But first and foremost it comes back to 20 women who became the warm-weather version of the 1980 US men's Olympic hockey team; a team which an entire nation closed ranks behind. They are brought to vivid life by Longman here.

Reading it also harkens back to a time when you could pick up a newspaper's sports section and not have it resemble a police blotter. Or a litany of overpaid, underachieving athletes who, no matter how much they stink out their sports, always want to get paid even more. Of a time when American sport used to be pretty nice, unlike what it is now. That the same people who moan about the success of women's sports are the same ones who complain about no role models in sport. Longman presents 20 compelling ones here.

He puts you smack dab in the center of the maelstrom that was July 10, 1999 at the Rose Bowl and you won't even have to pay a scalper's ticket. It's a book that can be read over and over again, and you'll never get tired of it. A wonderful achievement and certainly worthy of any non-fiction awards at the end of the year.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not just for soccer fans..., August 26, 2000
By A Customer
I read this book at a critical time in my professional life asa fundraiser, and it couldn't have come at a better time. As a budding athlete (a runner), I hadn't played soccer since I was on a YMCA team in the 2nd grade, but I was very interested in learning more about these women athletes who seemed so dedicated to their sport in an era of big-money sports and disintegrating team loyalty. I figured, hey, I need a role model, and here I have an entire team of them!

But what struck me the most as I read the book was exactly that: the team. I mean the whole concept of the team itself, beyond the individual personalities that comprise it. Anyone with a desire to learn how to achieve team work in any setting -- whether on the soccer field or in the office -- should read this book. At a time in my job when teamwork at my all-women office seemed to be at its lowest ebb, with backstabbing and harsh hallway gossiping eating away at office morale, it was a joyous relief to read of a group of strong, hard-driving, hard-playing women who feared each other, respected each other, screamed at each other, laughed with each other, cried with each other, all the while pursuing and ACHIEVING a common goal with such ferocity and drive and sheer dignity that was breathtaking to behold. It left me with tremendous hope for my own group of strong, hard-driving, hard-playing women and our certain ability to achieve our lofty goal ... for a cause we each personally believe in. Sure, we don't have 90,000 people watching us, but we do have 3,000 -- and more -- who do depend on us and the money we hope to bring in. I have the urge to buy a copy of this book for every woman in my office.

Although I wasn't privileged enough to have witnessed that seminal moment in soccer history at the Rose Bowl in '99, I do feel blessed to have encountered this graceful and inspiring team in this marvelous book. I run with greater purpose in my stride, my eye firmly set on a sweet ... victory, and I work with a lift in my spirit and renewed faith in my co-workers, my teammates.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Pedestrian Account Of A Great Team and Victory, July 24, 2000
By A Customer
This is a competent account of the U.S. national women's soccer team and its victory in the 1999 Women's World Cup. Jere Longman structured the book around the final match with China. I suppose the idea was to build tension while flashing back to early matches and describing the players and the team in depth. I found the structure to be a major annoyance, however. A straight chronology and/or a chapter on each player probably would have been more effective. The lack of an index is annoying. The information and quotes are strong, but there are few new insights (Tiffeny Milbrett's comments on the older players being the most prominent). The pictures are a disappointment, centering on Michelle Akers' travails in the final with a few others. And as another review points out, there are plenty of typos. But the team is so inspiring that it carries this book.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An interesting read ..., August 26, 2000
Unlike a few of my fellow reviewers, I found the structure of the book to be interesting and would recommend it to anyone who caught up in the U.S. Women's run to the Women's World Cup Chanpionship.

Briefly, the author used the Women's World Cup Final game as background, while intermittently weaving historical descriptions of the team members and women's sport in general, with a focus on Title IX. I felt there was only one occasion when I found this style to be confusing (Mia Hamm comments with a bad transfer to a different subject). I personally enjoyed the commentary of the affect of Title IX on team members and their generation, especially when the author compared the state of women's sport in the U.S. to other countries.

The only real criticism I can offer is that I found the editing to be poor. There seemed to be a few instances in which sentence structure or word choice was incorrect - not that I'm an expert (my opinion only) :).

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thank you, Jere Longman for this wonderful book...., July 16, 2000
Have you ever read a book and dreaded coming to the end? You can't stop reading it, but you try and pace yourself because you don't want it to ever stop. Well, obviously, I feel this way about The Girls of Summer, by Jere Longman. I was at the 1999 Women's World Cup Final, and reading this book brought back all the memories of that day: the sweltering heat, the anxiety, and the pure joy. Longman describes every important play in wonderful slow motion, and poetic imagery. The player profiles are seamless and beautifully intertwined throughout the book. It might seem as though I am bias towards Longman's effort, but being a huge US Team supporter, wouldn't I have higher expectations than the normal, everyday reader? I wish everyone could read The Girls of Summer.

To make a long story short, The Girls of Summer is a triumphant first effort by Jere Longman. The player profiles, history, and raw emotion in these 300 plus pages is a marvel. Thank you, Mr. Longman!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars great and insperational, October 11, 2001
By 
alex Rothemich (Scituate, RI USA) - See all my reviews
I thought that this was a great book. I enjoyed reading it because my favorite female athletes were the subjects in this book. This book shows the stroggle that athletes go through and the publicity that is always there no matter what.

This was probably the best book that i ever read because i play soccer and i like to seee wha goes around on the proffesional level. The us womens soccer team has gone trough their ups and downs and this book went through it step by step. I felt as though i know what they were going through because it was so real.

Mia Hamm is right now the best womens soccer play in the world. She is well know in any ste and country. She has been on adds and verious things to promote the womens soccer team. Others team mates have done the same but none to the level of Mia Hamm. This book shows what she has been through and her own personal struggle to make it as a proffesional athlete.

Now that i have read this book i have even more respect for the womens national soccer team and all proffesional athletes because i am aware of what they have gone through. I have been able to read about my favorite female athletes and know about their past. I recomend this book to anyone who is a female athlete or loves the game of soccer. It's not just for girls it is great for men to learn about proffesiional athletes.

alex rothemich

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 1999 Womens Soccer, February 25, 2001
By A Customer
Players go through alot not just on the field though, fighting for things that they believe in. People don't realize what hard work it takes. In being a women people dont give you as much recognision as they do male ball players. They dont get paid as much even though they work just as hard as male players do. In 1999 the U.S. womens soccer team showed the world that woman can do it.

The Girls of Summer by Jere Longman shows and tells the woman's U.S. soccer teams struggles throughout there period of dominance in the 1999 Womans Wolrd Cup tournament. Jere Longman really told you about how people didn't think the Woman's World Cup would get recognision. The U.S. womans's team proved them wrong with there domination throughout the World Cup and there win againts China to win it all. The author really got into this and almost showed you what it is like to be a player.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great read, July 17, 2000
By A Customer
I thoroughly enjoyed reading about these fine atheletes, from the beginnings of the national team, through to that searingly hot day in July. The writer takes the reader inside the inner workings of the team as a whole, the players as individuals, as well as behind the scenes with the coaches, and the game. I particularly enjoyed the way the author brings us onto the field with the players during the final game. Relive the penalties, and actually feel it as the players did. As a female soccer player and a fan of the game, it is certainly one of the best "soccer books" I've read. My one complaint is that the text is littered with typos, ike it had been edited in a hurry.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If you're a fan of women's sports this is a must read, July 10, 2000
This book gives you an inside view of the recent US Women's World Cup Victory. It tells the story of the women who played in front of the largest crowd every in women's sports history. The first chapter alone puts you on the field just minutes before the historical tie breaking shot. Even if you don't like the sport of soccer, this book is worth reading. It tell of victory as a team! Great Book!
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The Girls of Summer: The U.S. Women's Soccer Team and How It Changed the World
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