A consumer’s guide to the best and worst of sports media and merchandise. Ground rules: If it can be read, played, heard, observed, worn, viewed, dialed or downloaded, it’s in play here.
- Share via
What: “The Beautiful Game”
Author: Jonathan Littman (Avon Books, $23)
* “At times, Heather resembled an impish Gwyneth Paltrow. It wasn’t just her classic features and slightly upturned nose. Heather’s pointed elbows and impossibly thin legs sometimes gave her the appearance of a stick figure in motion.”
* “Trinity was hard to get a lock on: One eye was nutty brown, the other was blue-green. She had chiseled, Christie Brinkley good looks, and thick eyebrows that jumped or fell to forecast her mood.”
* “Kristin had the poise of a debutante, but she also had the sinewy legs of a competitive tennis player she’d been. Angela, of course, had those years of ballet training, and track, but Shauna was a thoroughbred, from her dark thick mane to her great soccer build.”
There you have it. Is this a romance novel or an inspiring story about a youth soccer team from Santa Rosa? Is rakish-yet-reserved Rhett going to appear in Chapter 3?
Indeed, this is a season inside, an honest long look at a girls’ elite soccer team. Patience is advised, however. Once you get past some of Littman’s bothersome physical descriptions, this is a book worth reading, whether you are a soccer player, a soccer parent or both.
A soccer team, of any age group, is going to have its share of drama. A hated coach. Meddling parents. More shifting alliances than a United Nations assembly.
Here, the primary focus is rookie coach Emiria Salzmann, a star player from Sonoma State. Salzmann’s learning season, warts and all, is explored in detail, on and off the field.
Eventually, the girls grow--learn a few things about life and sport--and so does Salzmann. As for the author, he lifts his game too. After a rocky first 10 minutes, out of a demanding 90, Littman finishes well.
More to Read
Go beyond the scoreboard
Get the latest on L.A.'s teams in the daily Sports Report newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.