Alysa Liu Audiolibro Por Jonathan Brockman arte de portada

Alysa Liu

On Her Own Terms

Muestra de Voz Virtual

Prueba gratis de 30 días de Audible Standard

Prueba Standard gratis
Selecciona 1 audiolibro al mes de nuestra colección completa de más de 1 millón de títulos.
Es tuyo mientras seas miembro.
Obtén acceso ilimitado a los podcasts con mayor demanda.
Plan Standard se renueva automáticamente por $8.99 al mes después de 30 días. Cancela en cualquier momento.

Alysa Liu

De: Jonathan Brockman
Narrado por: Virtual Voice
Prueba Standard gratis

$8.99 al mes después de 30 días. Cancela en cualquier momento.

Compra ahora por $9.99

Compra ahora por $9.99

Background images

Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual

Voz Virtual es una narración generada por computadora para audiolibros..

At thirteen, Alysa Liu was the youngest U.S. figure skating champion in history – the first American woman to land three clean triple Axels in competition. She was also being told what to eat, what to wear, what music to skate to, and when to stop talking. Her father brought a radar gun to practice. Her coaches controlled every minute of her day. She described herself as a “puppet.” Her mental health was, in her own words, “absolutely horrible.”

At sixteen, she quit. She posted a retirement announcement on Instagram and walked away from the sport that had consumed her entire childhood. She got her driver’s license. She enrolled at UCLA. She went skiing for the first time. She attended birthday parties. She discovered what it felt like to be a person instead of a project.

Then, in January 2024, she walked into a public skating session and landed a double Axel on her first try. Everything came back – except the fear.

Alysa Liu: On Her Own Terms is the story of what happened next.

The Comeback No One Predicted

Alysa returned to competition seven inches taller, with new coaches, new boundaries, and a philosophy that bewildered the figure skating establishment: she would skate for joy, not obligation. She chose her own music. She asked her father to step back. She told reporters, “I don’t really feel pressure.” Then she won the World Championship. Then she won Olympic gold – skating to Donna Summer’s “MacArthur Park Suite” in a golden dress, grinning so wide you could see the smiley piercing. She became the first American woman to win Olympic figure skating gold in twenty-four years.

“Oh hell no,” she said when asked if she felt stressed. “Competitions are where I’m least stressed.”

The Secret at the Heart of the Story

But this is not only a sports book. Beneath the comeback is a deeper narrative – one that begins in 1989, in a different country, with a different kind of escape.

Arthur Liu was a student dissident in Guangzhou who organized hunger strikes during the Tiananmen Square protests. When the crackdown came, he fled China on a smuggler’s boat through a covert operation called Yellowbird. He arrived in America as a political refugee at twenty-five with nothing. He built a law career, raised five children as a single father through surrogacy, and invested a million dollars in his daughter’s skating. He raised her with the fierce intensity of a man who understood that the world takes things from you if you are not vigilant.

In 2022, the Department of Justice revealed that Chinese government agents had been surveilling the Liu family – trying to obtain their passports, threatening to block their international travel, monitoring their home. The dissident’s freedom had followed him across an ocean and thirty years.

Arthur escaped a country so his daughter could have a choice. His daughter used that choice to escape the life he built for her – and then to come back to it, free.

Who This Book Is For

If you watched Alysa Liu win gold and wanted to understand the full story behind the joy – this is it. If you are a parent of a competitive young athlete wondering where the line is between support and control – this is it. If you are drawn to stories about identity, mental health, burnout, and the radical act of choosing yourself – this is it. If you want to know how a Tiananmen Square escape and an Olympic gold medal are connected by a single word – freedom – this is the book that makes the case.

The puppet cut her strings. The dissident’s daughter dissented. This is the definitive Alysa Liu book.

Biografías y Memorias Deportes Deportes de Invierno Olimpiadas y Paralimpiadas
Todavía no hay opiniones