• Course Correction

  • A Story of Rowing and Resilience in the Wake of Title IX
  • By: Ginny Gilder
  • Narrated by: Janis Ian
  • Length: 10 hrs and 37 mins
  • 4.1 out of 5 stars (44 ratings)

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Course Correction  By  cover art

Course Correction

By: Ginny Gilder
Narrated by: Janis Ian
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Publisher's summary

Wild meets The Boys in the Boat, a memoir about the quest for Olympic gold and the triumph of love over fear. Forty years ago, when a young Ginny Gilder stood on the edge of Boston's Charles River and first saw a rowing shell in motion, it was love at first sight. Yearning to escape her family history, which included her mother's emotional unraveling and her father's singular focus on investment acumen as the ultimate trophy, Gilder discovered rowing at a pivotal moment in her life. Having grown up in an era when girls were only beginning to abandon the sidelines as observers and cheerleaders to become competitors and national champions, Gilder harbored no dreams of athletic stardom. Once at Yale, however, her operating assumptions changed nearly overnight when, as a freshman in 1975, she found her way to the university's rowing tanks in the gymnasium's cavernous basement.

From her first strokes as a novice, Gilder found herself in a new world, training with Olympic rowers and participating in the famous Title IX naked protest, which helped define the movement for equality in college sports. Short, asthmatic, and stubborn, Gilder made the team against all odds and for the next 10 years devoted herself to answering a seemingly simple question: how badly do you want to go fast?

Course Correction recounts the physical and psychological barriers Gilder overcame as she transformed into an elite athlete who reached the highest echelon of her sport. Set against the backdrop of unprecedented cultural change, Gilder's story personalizes the impact of Title IX, illustrating the life-changing lessons learned in sports but felt far beyond the athletic arena. Heartfelt and candid, Gilder recounts lessons learned from her journey as it wends its way from her first glimpse of an oar to the Olympic podium in 1984, carries her through family tragedy, strengthens her to accept her true sexual identity, and ultimately frees her to live her life.

©2015 Virginia A. Gilder (P)2016 Virginia A. Gilder

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

a coming up and out story

beautiful story of personal, physical, social and emotional resilience told on the foundation of rowing sport. contemporary coming out story that reminds us to be who we are gay or not, athletic or not, man or woman. so proud of those who paved the path for female athletes.

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    4 out of 5 stars
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Inspiring read

Gilder 's recounting of her introduction to college rowing and her quest for Olympic glory were fun to read, especially for a former college rower. given the books subtitle, I thought this would focus much more on women's college sports, but it's really an autobiography woven through with rowing analogies and metaphors. The pace was slow at times, but I was glad I listened the whole way through. Gilder is an impressive and determined lady.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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A History Lesson and Story of Personal Triumph

When I read a description that compared this book to The Boys in the Boat, an audiobook that I loved, I was skeptical. And when I listened to the first hour or two and learned a lot more about the author’s dysfunctional family upbringing, I wondered whether I was reading a rowing book or a tell-all psychological profile.

I am so glad that I stuck with the book. It is absolutely terrific. As the story of Ginny Gilder’s crew activity unfolded, I understood why she had gone into such detail on her growing up. So many of the adventures, the family dynamic, and the dysfunction played directly into her pursuit of athletic excellence.

The story is a gripping story of her pursuit of Olympic gold and finding herself. So much of her crew experiences carry over to her personal discovery, and she unlocked so much of her personal discovery only when she viewed her personal situation through the lens of her crew experience.

But this book is still more. It brings readers back to the time when women’s athletic equality was in its infancy. I can relate, as Ginny and I are close in age (she’s actually four weeks younger). I remember when the NCAA didn’t sanction women’s sports and the Olympics had few women’s competitions. I recall when women’s basketball was organized through the AIAW (Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women in the 1970s, when Wayland Baptist (the Flying Queens!), Immaculata, and Cheyney State were perennial top teams. I remember even as late as 1984 when a woman with whom I graduated from college, Joan Benoit, became the first woman to win a gold medal in the Olympic marathon (coincidentally, the same Olympiad in which the author competed).

Ginny Gilder experienced that inequality as the athletic world transitioned to full support of women’s athletics. She details the struggle that her Yale crew endured to secure the same level of funding, physical resources, and other advantages that men’s teams enjoyed. In this sense, her book is an important lesson, akin to books that highlight the segregation of major athletic conferences prior to the 1960s.

Throughout the book, the author provides hints of the many meanings of the title. By the time you’re finished listening, you’ll understand the multiple course corrections to which she refers.

Guys, this isn’t a “chick” book. It’s a well written (albeit with half a dozen or so grammatical mistakes that I didn’t expect a Yale-educated author or her editor to make) book that combines a history lesson and a personal drama that is compelling and eye-opening.

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Every young woman should read this book

I had the pleasure of meeting Ginny Gilder and heard her talk about this book. I also started rowing in my 50's because I was not allowed to enjoy sports as a young woman as all the money went to men's sports pre Title IX. I went to a poor high school and the only sports for the girls was swimming and gymnastics. Ginny shows us not only what it has been like to be a leader in rowing but also in her life. She shares her scars as well as her successes. I thought the book was terrific.

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4 people found this helpful

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Gilder's coming of age story is compelling

Janis Ian has a sing-songy way of reading Gilder's story that's annoying at times, but the story itself is interesting and compelling. I found myself wanting to drive places so I could continue to listen in my car!

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

great read

This is a wonderful passionate account of one woman’s experience maturing in the wake of Title IX. I predate and never had the opportunities this mandate provided. Although I was the best first baseman ( a lefty) on my dad’s Little League team in Brooklyn, I wasn’t allowed to play because I was a girl. As a crew mom for 7 years to my daughter’s club team and D1 team, I could relate to the determination, drive and angst of Ginny’s quest. The book is a great read for people not familiar with this sport. I was disappointed in the narrator. Her inflections were too much Barbie and not as much like those female warriors I got to know catching crabs, rigging boats sufffering disappointing erg scores and hard fought finishes. Ginny and Lynn are still living their true lives and still support this sport. You go, girls!!

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Inclusive Rowing for all

This was an incredible story of a woman going through a rough time for females in rowing just after Title 9 was passed… It’s a brilliant coming-of-age true story of a tremendous athlete overcoming so many things! I loved it

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