- Jan 31, 2021
- 1,978
- 3,478
I'm going to give this another try. Please, if there are any questions or confusion about the summaries, ask me here. I actually own this one, so I'm happy to go back and look up exact quotes. Per usual, unless explicitly marked, the opinions and analyses come from the book, not me.
This is Claudia Miller's biography of Shannon, published in 1999. After the beginning, chapters are long and detailed, so it will probably be one a day/one every other day if people are interested.
Foreword, by Shannon Miller
This is Claudia Miller's biography of Shannon, published in 1999. After the beginning, chapters are long and detailed, so it will probably be one a day/one every other day if people are interested.
Foreword, by Shannon Miller
- 21 years old at time of writing
- The constants of her career: Support from her coaches, community, and family
- Often talks with parents about sacrifices made, but doesn’t think they were really sacrifices—she loves being in the gym and pushing herself
- Opens with feeling stunned when Shannon sat down her vault in Atlanta after she missed the horse with one hand
- Knew Shannon would be feeling embarrassed and frustrated and like she had let down the crowd
- Shannon was the top scoring American in the team competition
- Mag 7: Seven friends, fiercely competitive in national events but functioning as a unit in world competition
- Had hit her vaults in warm up of the vault final and only a small step on her first one
- Said she knew something was wrong as soon as she hit the springboard for her second vault
- After the competition, Nunno met with Ron and Claudia (Shannon’s parents) and asked them to talk to her and help her pull herself together before the beam final the next day
- Shannon was born on her due date, 5 lbs 6 oz—small but healthy
- At four months, the doctor noticed her legs turned in too much. Started with home PT, but then she was required to wear baby shoes attached a metal bar that would keep her legs turned out—should only be removed for baths, and might have to be worn for a year
- Shannon hated it, but they stuck with it. They were warned it might delay her gross motor milestones, but she crawled at 8 months and walked before 12. Claudia speculates she was keeping up with her big sister, Tessa (two years older)
- Lost Shannon in a department store shortly after she learned to walk. She made her way from the children’s clothing to men’s shoes and was trying on shoes when they finally found her 15 minutes later
- Jokes that Shannon is still obsessed with shoes, but her taste has improved
- Tessa was Shannon’s first role model—wanted to go with Tessa, dress like Tessa, would do whatever Tessa said
- Got the girls a jungle gym when they were 3.5 and 18 months; Tessa quickly mastered it, then shortly after that she found Shannon at the top
- Tessa was enrolled in dance at 6. Shannon was not because she was only four and money was tight. The next time Grandma called, Shannon told her sad story and Shannon got dance classes
- Loved the classes, wore her costume around the house and for Halloween afterwards. When she outgrew it, she wore Tessa’s
- After a year, Tessa decided to move on. She discussed it with Shannon and both girls quit. Mother hoped they’d do it again when they got older, but it was nice not driving them twice a week, especially since their little brother Troy had been born in Dec 1980
- Shannon would wheel her brother around the house in her doll carriage