I have never read a figure skating biography, but this thread might push me to do so for the first time. It will all depend on whether there's an English translation and whether the book is well-written.
A cleaned up narrative does not make for a good memoir. Andre Agassi had to admit quite a few embarrassing/shameful things, but I still believe that is the best sports memoir. To the extent that Gabi is able to admit ugly things about herself that will increase her credibility.
I agree that it's unfortunate that the bigger issues (abuse, sexual assault, etc) here are being underplayed in favor of: (1) people who want to focus on Cizeron's reputation when I'm sure he only plays a small part in her larger story and (2) people who are focused on some minor detail about V/M (if you're clutching pearls at wishing one's competitor fell, your self-righteousness must be choking you everyday or you're really good at portraying perfection online).
A cleaned up narrative does not make for a good memoir. Andre Agassi had to admit quite a few embarrassing/shameful things, but I still believe that is the best sports memoir. To the extent that Gabi is able to admit ugly things about herself that will increase her credibility.
I agree that it's unfortunate that the bigger issues (abuse, sexual assault, etc) here are being underplayed in favor of: (1) people who want to focus on Cizeron's reputation when I'm sure he only plays a small part in her larger story and (2) people who are focused on some minor detail about V/M (if you're clutching pearls at wishing one's competitor fell, your self-righteousness must be choking you everyday or you're really good at portraying perfection online).
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! (And it's almost always the author who pays. The ones who aren't willing to, and decline professional help, end up with an inferior product. The publisher only pays if the book was the idea of that publisher who talked the celebrity "author" into the project by promising it would all be done for them, and all they needed to do was put their name to it and agree to multiple interviews and exhausting book tours.)
so I certainly wouldn't judge a skater for hoping for a mistake from their rival. God forbid an athlete want to win.