cover image Chalked Up: Inside Elite Gymnastics’ Merciless Coaching, Overzealous Parents, Eating Disorders, and Elusive Olympic Dreams

Chalked Up: Inside Elite Gymnastics’ Merciless Coaching, Overzealous Parents, Eating Disorders, and Elusive Olympic Dreams

Jennifer Sey, . . Morrow, $24.95 (289pp) ISBN 978-0-06-135146-4

Sey writes of her career in internationally competitive gymnastics, which culminated when she won the 1986 U.S. national championship at age 17. From the start Sey was an underdog, ever the second-best athlete on the team hoping to prove herself with tenacity and toughness. She endured numerous injuries—including a broken femur, which could have ended her career—as well as an eating disorder, depression, isolation and tremendous strain on her family. With each new sacrifice that her parents and brother made to support her, the stakes crept higher, inuring them all to gymnastics’ inherent physical and psychological trauma. After claiming the U.S. title, Sey was “shell-shocked and exhausted,” suddenly robbed of her lifelong motivation. “I’d always been a fighter, a come-from-behind girl. Now that I was on top, the battle would be unwinnable.” The memoir’s poignant glimpses at Sey’s adult struggle to reckon with her past are regrettably sparse, and her prose occasionally lapses into wordiness, but overall, she has written a courageous story befitting a comeback kid—a timely release for the 2008 Olympics. (May)