Monday, June 24, 5:30 PM: Katie Steele and Tiffany Brown, Authors of "The Price She Pays: Confronting the Hidden Mental Health Crisis in Women’s Sports – From the Schoolyard to the Stadium": Meet and Greet, Book Talk, Signing
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Publishers Weekly (05/20/2024): Starred Review
Family therapists Steele and Brown debut with an empathetic guide to supporting female athletes at the high school and college levels. Illustrating the psychological challenges athletes face on and off the field, the authors describe how a college soccer player became clinically depressed after tearing her hamstring and watching "her team grow and thrive without her." Opining on how parents can help their daughters through such hardships, Steele and Brown recommend making it clear that one's love is not contingent upon athletic performance and refraining from pushing children to continue a sport if they no longer enjoy it. Suggestions for coaches can feel obvious (don't "use personal attacks, belittling, or degradation to 'motivate'"; focus "on sport-specific corrections, avoiding critiques about personality or appearance"), but the anecdotes make clear that such abusive practices remain common. (A 2021 exposé on the University of Oregon track-and-field team revealed that one coach would measure body fat with calipers to shame runners into losing weight, leading some to develop eating disorders.) Such stories outrage, and the advice on how to do better by female athletes is well-considered. This should be required reading for parents and coaches. Agent: Susan Canavan, Waxman Literary. (June)
Copyright 2024 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.
Biographical Note:
Katie Steele, LMFT is a former highly recruited D1 athlete who ran track and cross country for the famed University of Oregon team. After her running career intersected with the infamous coach Alberto Salazar, she was left with trauma for years to come. Deciding to dedicate her career to the integration of mental health care in athletics, she is now a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist and co-founder of Thrive Mental Health, an outpatient mental health clinic in Bend, Oregon.
Tiffany Brown, Ph.D., LMFT,is an award-winning, senior faculty member at the University of Oregon in the Couples and Family Therapy graduate program and a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist who works with student athletes and provides mental health education for coaches and staff.
JournalistErin Stroutbrings compelling storytelling and essential expertise to the project as well. Her work has appeared inWashington Post, ESPN, SELF, Outside, Runner's World, Women's Running, Triathlete, Women's Healthand more.
Review Quotes:
"The Price She Paysshines a light on the toxic systems and practices in girls' and women's sports, and the change we so urgently need in order to pave the way for a future of female superstars who can thrive physically, mentally and emotionally. This masterpiece is a must read for female athletes, as well as their parents, coaches, and anyone who cares about making the world of sports a safer place for women."--Deena Kastor, Olympic Medalist, marathon
Review Quotes:
"Essential reading for anyone involved with girls' and women's sports: parents, coaches, managers, administrators, and athletes themselves. The authors, experienced mental health professionals, were driven to write this book as they treated athlete after athlete struggling with the ramifications of an unhealthy sports experience. Sports can and should be a huge positive for girls and women, but sadly there are still very predictable ways they turn negative. Let's all educate ourselves and then change practices and systems so that the vision of Title IX can be realized."--Sarah Lesko, MD, MPH, Executive Director, Bras for Girls
Review Quotes:
"Sports have the power to entertain, to thrill, and to bring people together. For a competitive athlete, the opportunity to go out on the field and deliver this day in and day out is a privilege. Yet this privilege can come at a high cost, particularly for girls and women. InThe Price She Pays, Katie Steele and Tiffany Brown offer an unflinchingly honest look at the unique stresses, pressures, and challenges female athletes face at all levels of competition, while also providing a hopeful roadmap for the systemic change that will allow them to (re)discover the joy of sport without sacrificing their mental and physical health."--Jessica Mendoza, Olympic gold and silver medalist, first female analyst for MLB on ESPN
Review Quotes:
"The Price She Paysis a stark reminder of the steep, and often hidden, costs when we focus solely on the physical aspects of sport and the win-at-all-costs nature of performance, especially for girls and women. Steele and Brown make the compelling case that if we want girls and women to thrive over the long-term--as athletes and as individuals--we can't ignore mental health. If you coach, teach, or parent girls and young women, you need to read this book. It's an essential toolkit for navigating the unique challenges female athletes face and for how we can create a better system of sports, one that supports women's needs and respects their value as whole human beings." --Christine Yu, author of Up to Speed
Review Quotes:
"The Price She Paysmasterfully combines storytelling and journalism to create an impactful read on the mental health crisis in women's sports. Sports have the incredible ability to empower girls and women, butThe Price She Paysexamines the many ways that sports culture and athletic systems often fail to protect female athletes. Steele and Brown use their expertise as mental health professionals to inform, educate, and inspire readers, urging us all to take part in developing healthier sporting for all. This is an important read for any athlete, coach, or parent."--Leeann Passaro, The Hidden Opponent
Review Quotes:
"While most of us pay attention to the stories of high-profile coaches found guilty of physical, mental, and sexual abuse of their female athletes, we often overlook how the culture of sport drives so many girls and women into unhealthy behaviors. Female athletes are brought up in a culture that encourages overtraining, eating disorders, and following coaches' orders no matter what. It's easy to point out when one coach or team takes it too far, butThe Price She Paysreminds us that we have the power to change the culture for all female athletes. It should be on the bookshelf of every parent and coach in sport." --Kara Goucher, two-time Olympian, World Championships silver medalist, and author of The Longest Race
Review Quotes:
"This book should be required reading for all coaches and parents of women in sport. I want to see sports change so that we are not only creating a world where girls can experience all the joys and benefits that sport bring for the rest of their lives, but thrive in a system that is built for them and supports their needs mentally as well as physically.The Price She Paysis one step closer towards that future."--Jessie Diggins, two World Cup overall titles, three Olympic medals, six World Championship medals
Review Quotes:
"An empathetic guide to supporting female athletes at the high school and college levels.... should be required reading for parents and coaches."--Publisher's Weekly
Publisher Marketing:
Two experts in mental health and sport lift the veil on the crisis in women's athletics, offering parents and coaches urgently needed advice and support and showing how female athletes can find joy in whatever sport they choose, at whatever level they compete.
No matter the sport, the message to girls and women is the same: Be aggressive, but not too aggressive. Win at all costs, but be polite while doing it. Get strong, but not too big. Female athletes have long been conditioned to perform under these standards, gracefully and without complaints.
Yet, behind the scenes, female athletes are suffering from disordered eating and substance use; depression and anxiety; emotional and sexual abuse; racism and discrimination; self-harm, and even suicide ideation. When global tennis star Naomi Osaka and gymnastics world champion Simone Biles took breaks from competing to tend to their mental health, many were compelled to ask: What is causing this mental health crisis in women's sports? In this urgent yet "hopeful roadmap for systemic change." (Jessica Mendoza, Olympic medalist), Katie Steele and Dr. Tiffany Brown illuminate where we are going wrong--and how we can correct course.
Through first-hand accounts, research, and reporting, they reveal the deep layers of trauma and mistreatment women experience in their pursuit of excellence in sport. They show parents, coaches, and athletes how to recognize the signs of mistreatment and mental health issues, and reveal how, by focusing on the wellbeing of the whole person--not just the athlete--we can provide women and girls with the support they need to thrive, in whatever sport they choose, at whatever level they compete.
Review Citations:
Publishers Weekly 05/20/2024 (EAN 9780316567473, Hardcover)