Author:Emma O'Reilly
When Emma O'Reilly joined the US Postal cycling team in 1996, she could have had no idea how she would become a central figure in the biggest doping scandal in sporting history. Yet when Lance Armstrong, starting his comeback from cancer, signed for US Postal, it was Emma, the only woman on the team, who became his personal soigneur. This is the definitive inside story of that time, and of the enormous repercussions that resonate to this day for Emma, Lance and the whole sport.
Emma had the strength to break cycling's omerta by speaking out against the culture of doping. She thought she would be one of many whistleblowers, doing what she believed was right. Isolated and shunned by the sport she loved, however, her reputation was systematically destroyed. And yet she had the courage to bounce back, and remarkably, to forgive those who made her existence a living hell. This is the ultimate memoir of truth and its many consequences.
Impartial, honest, brave... the definitive account of those years.
—— Irish Examiner, Books of the YearFascinating.
—— Irish Times, Books of the YearOf all the depictions of Armstrong over the years, this is the most empathetic, unrelenting in its depiction of the doping monster, yet ultimately it is also forgiving.
—— The GuardianBalanced and inspiring... Emma O'Reilly writes with great courage and honesty.
—— Julie Knowles, WaterstonesAn exciting brand of nonfiction depicting the darker side of the American dream. An intimate, front-row look at two stories of hope, glory, and violence
—— VogueBest book I read this year
—— Alex Massie (on twitter)Nothing else felt as strong and smart and fresh and honest this year - nothing else whipped my head around the way something great and truly new does
—— Lev Grossman , SalonAn intelligent, funny, and utterly captivating look at a surprising subculture
—— BuzzfeedThrown does what all literature aspires to do - to bring us into a community, a universe, we did not know we cared about and in the end leave us shattered and revealed
—— Los Angeles TimesThe most fascinating book I've read this year. The precision of Howley's prose reminds me of Joan Didion or David Foster Wallace
—— TimeThe fight book of our generation has landed. Thrown is a fantastic debut
—— The WeekA poetic portrait of a bloody American subculture, and a knockout of a nonfiction debut
—— O, The Oprah MagazineAs dark and funny as anything I have read this year
—— Washington PostKerry Howley embarks on a quest for ecstasy delivered in an unexpected forum: MMA fights. This transfixing nonfiction narrative combines bloody play-by-play with philosophical inquiry, delivering serious punches. Welcome to the Octagon
—— PlayboyBeautiful. It’s refreshing to read a piece of place-writing that digs so deeply and tenderly into a marginal landscape, and which (strikingly) does so using a novelist’s tools as well as a nature writer’s.
—— Will Atkins , author of The MoorCowen's relationship with this morsel of land is intense and honest, and described in superb prose... Not only rich and strange, but also astonishing.
—— Adam Thorpe , Resurgence and EcologistWhen Cowen thinks of himself as an owl or a butterfly or a fox caught in a snare the book lights up... leaping over the space between animal and human as though there were no difference between us.
—— Kirsty Gunn , GuardianCowen is without doubt one of our best current writers on landscape, on a par with Roger Deakin, Richard Mabey and Robert MacFarlane
—— Solitary Walker blogWonderful … An eerie haunting book … rendered with hair-raising, almost hallucinogenic, lyricism. Cowen moves on through the seasons of the year and the creatures of the edge land, feeling, more than observing, how the improving circumstances of animal life mirror his own climb out of darkness.
—— Brian Bethune , Maclean'sBlending natural history with a novelistic approach, Cowen revives his connection to the evocative, mysterious power of the natural world.
—— Sunday ExpressA luminous nature book
—— Arminta Wallace , Irish TimesVery beautiful indeed... [Cowen] has all the alliterative grace and fresh metaphors of a poet
—— Rebecca Foster , New Books[A] poetic memoir... This apparently scrappy and overlooked piece of wasteland - a tangle of wood, meadow, field and river - proves to be, under [Cowen's] forensic and magnifying gaze, brimming with riches.
—— Ruth Campbell , Northern EchoHe is engrossed by his landscape, enthralled by the minutiae and evokes the same fascination in the reader
—— Daily Mail