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No Mountain High Enough: Raising Lance, Raising Me
 
 
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No Mountain High Enough: Raising Lance, Raising Me [Hardcover]

Linda Armstrong Kelly (Author), Joni Rodgers (Author), Lance Armstrong (Foreword)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 5, 2005
From the mother of champion cyclist Lance Armstrong—an extraordinary story of the resilience of the human spirit and the remarkable effect of great parenting.

Lance Armstrong has dazzled the world with his six straight Tour de France championships, his winning personality, and his poignant victory over life-threatening cancer. Yet the adage that "behind every strong man there is a stronger woman" has never been more true than in Lance’s case. His mother, Linda Armstrong Kelly, is a force of nature whose determination, optimism, and sheer joie de vivre not only nurtured one of our era’s greatest athletes but fueled her own transformation from a poverty-stricken teen in the Dallas projects to a powerful role model for mothers everywhere. This luminous memoir, written with humor and compassion, tells Linda’s story of survival.

Pregnant at age seventeen, kicked out of her home, and mired in an abusive relationship, Linda was a perfect candidate for disaster. But armed with a fierce belief in herself as a work in progress, and buoyed by a tidal wave of love for her little boy, Linda flouted statistics and became both a corner-office executive and a no-nonsense, empowering mom whose desire to excel was contagious. Her resolve to find “the diamond in the Dumpster, the blessing in every bummer” set an extraordinary example for Lance—and will inspire everyday moms to dream big and make a difference.

Funny, resonant, down-to-earth, and utterly unforgettable, No Mountain High Enough is exhilarating proof that sheer willpower can—and occasionally does—triumph over adversity.

From Linda Armstrong Kelly’s No Mountain High Enough:

This is what it means to be a mother, I realized. It had nothing to do with being old enough or knowing everything or keeping to a strict schedule. It had to do with loving someone with a love so huge, the rest of the world becomes insignificant by comparison. No fear I felt would ever amount to anything, compared to what I felt for my child. No task would ever be too hard for me. No one would ever be able to make me feel small. I was The Mama. You don’t get any bigger than that.”


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

A memoir written by a famous athlete's mother may seem like a blatant attempt to cash in on yet another aspect of the athlete's celebrity. Yet Kelly, mother of six-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong, has managed to turn out an honest, fun and engaging account of her life. For the most part, this is Kelly's story, in which Lance plays a key supporting role. Kelly painstakingly recounts her 1960s Texas childhood with a poor mother who moved the family (sans Kelly's father, who abandoned them) from one lousy apartment to the next. Though self-sufficient—she landed a job at a KFC when she was only 13—Kelly was thrown for a loop when she unexpectedly became pregnant (with Lance) as a junior in high school. She made the most of her limited circumstances, raising Lance alone. They'd eat mac and cheese and play silly games at home instead of going out to the movies; they got used to "stumbling and getting up again." Kelly relates their trials—as well as the string of less-than-perfect boyfriends and husbands she went through—in a winningly homey and self-teasing manner. Not surprisingly, when the issue of Lance's cancer arises later in the book and mother and son endure brutal rounds of chemotherapy, readers' heartstrings get thoroughly strummed, though not unnecessarily so. This is a sincerely heartwarming tale, laced with true Texas grit.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

If this autobiography by the mother of cyclist Lance Armstrong is the essence of greeting-card sentimentality and rah-rah optimism, it still reveals the force behind the six-time (and counting) Tour de France champion. Raised in poverty and family dysfunction in Dallas--her father alcoholic, her mother unsupportive--Linda was a child herself at 17 when Lance was born. She raised the boy as a single mom, supporting them with two, sometimes three, jobs until she emerged decades later as a successful executive with Ericsson Telecommunications. Her story here tracks Lance's growth as a legendary cyclist and as a person, his successful (so far) battle with cancer, Linda's three failed marriages, her current successful marriage, and her personal and professional development. Her secret to Lance's success, treacly as it might seem: positive thinking. "What can I say?" she writes. "I believe in the power of being cheered on." Alan Moores
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Archetype; First Edition edition (April 5, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 076791855X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0767918558
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1 x 9.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (21 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,179,697 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

21 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (21 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Now we know where Lance got his drive., May 7, 2005
By 
Terry Mathews (a small town in east Texas) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: No Mountain High Enough: Raising Lance, Raising Me (Hardcover)
Nothing was going to keep Linda Armstrong Kelly and her son from getting their piece of the American Dream.

Knowing Lance's story is helpful, but not essential to enjoying Linda's telling of a life of poverty, less than wise choices and being mother to a live wire named Lance. (Who was supposed to be named Erica, should he have been a girl.)

With little more than a heart full of love for her child and a huge amount of determination, Linda carved out a life for the two of them . . . truly against all odds. Armed only with a GED and a real estate license, she rose from a temporary clerk to the rank of project manager for a major telecommunications company. She raised Lance to believe in himself and it seems she didn't try to squelch his infatuation with danger . . . and speed. Her determination to succeed was quickly transferred to Lance, who's natural athletic abilities were just what the doctor (and his mother) ordered/needed to keep his boundless energy channeled in a positive manner.

My favorite part of the story revolved around Lance's early competitions, when Linda was his only "pit crew" and it was, indeed, the two of them against the world.

While being open and honest about her own unfortunate choices, Linda shows herself to be fallible, too. However, instead of having a pity party, she seems to learn from her every mistake and to take each personal relationship failure and make something positive out of it. It's good to know she's found the love of her life and is happy at last.

Never flinching from responsibility. Instilling a good work ethic. Teaching the value of a dollar. Believing in the good in her child, despite some teen-age boy pranks to the contrary.

Maybe Linda Armstrong Kelly should start her own foundation and teach parents how to raise their kids to be STRONG, responsible, caring and giving adults.

Kudos to her . . . and that kid she raised to ride like the wind!

Enjoy!
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The real victory, May 20, 2005
This review is from: No Mountain High Enough: Raising Lance, Raising Me (Hardcover)
I'm a Lance fan. So, when I read this book, it was only out of curiosity for Lance's career. But I found myself reading about an everyday victory, and one not rewarded with multi-million dollar advertising contracts or front-page stories.

Linda could have given away the baby. Linda could have received welfare and lived off the government. She didn't have to work hard to improve her career. She could have stayed in the projects or in bad marriages. Instead, her own determination lifted her and her child's life.

Sometimes I feel down because I'm struggling to save enough to buy a house, and I'm earning far more than she did and I don't have a child to raise. This is a wonderful, motivating book by a woman who never believed it when people told her it couldn't be done.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars SUPER MOM AND MORE, June 26, 2005
This review is from: No Mountain High Enough: Raising Lance, Raising Me (Hardcover)
This is a story about Lance Armstrong's mother, but it is more a book about parenting and choices that people make. Linda Armstrong Kelly has made some interesting choices in her life, some good and some bad, but she seems to have gotten through them with a great attitude, and that is what I learned from this book. Oviously we wouldn't be reading this book, if she wasn't the mother of the 6 times Tour de France winner, but I found her insight into many topics interesting. She wrote honestly about not getting along with her mother and about other topics. She wrote about her one husband that beat her, another husband that was a womanizer and another that was a drinker. I liked that she changed the names of her past husbands in the story to protect them and her. She wrote about her worries when Lance would get hurt and especially when he was getting treated with Cancer which was very touching. I would suggest this book to Mothers who want to read an inspiring story. I enjoyed reading this book and recommend it highly.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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I would like to say right up front-I did not know about the fireballs. Read the first page
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Miss Spencer, Miss Mamie, Eddie Haskell, Lance Armstrong, Tour de France, Linda Armstrong, Green Machine, Aunt Peggy, Donna Reed, Gussie Nell Davis, Mother's Day, Dressing Gawdy, Jack Farmer, Pac Bell, Penney Teen Board, Richardson Bike Mart, San Antonio, Wichita Falls
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