Book Review: Every Second Counts

He lives in Austin, Texas.

Every Second Counts confronts the challenge of moving beyond his cancer experience, his first Tour victory, and his celebrity status. In Every Second Counts he is to be admired as a human being, a man who sees every day as a challenge to live richly and well, no matter what hardships may come. He also oversees the Lance Armstrong Foundation, a nonprofit organization that assists cancer patients around the world with managing and surviving the disease. –Patrick O’Kelley –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. His new book addresses the equally daunting challenge of living in the aftermath of this experience and making the most of every breath of life. Armstrong candidly discusses his prickly relationship with the French and the ultimately disproved accusations of doping within his Tour de France team, and he writes about his recent achievements, including celebrating five years of cancer survival and how he restored a magnificent chapel in his beloved Spain. .

Product Information:

To view this book on Amazon.com, click here.

Author’s Bio:

Champion cyclist LANCE ARMSTRONG continues to make winning the Tour de France his annual cycling goal.

In the face of September 11–which arrives halfway through the narrative (just before the fifth anniversary of his diagnosis)–Armstrong draws from his experiences to show that suffering, fear, and death are the essential human condition. In 2002 she won the Associated Press’s Columnist of the Year Award. She has cowritten many bestselling sports books, including It’s Not About the Bike and, with Pat Summitt, Reach for the Summit (Broadway Books).

Since the release of his megabestseller, Its Not About the Bike, Lance Armstrong has enjoyed a new series of thrilling rides, including the birth of his twin daughters, being chosen as Sportsman of the Year by Sports Illustrated, and extending his string of Tour victories to a record-tying fifth in 2003. Continuing the inspiring story begun in his first book, Every Second Counts captures the mind-set of a man who has beaten incredible odds and considers each day an opportunity for excellence. And just as Armstrong managed to repeat his incredible 1999 tour victory, Every Second Counts repeats–and, in some ways exceedsthe success of his bestselling first memoir, It’s Not About the Bike.

Amazon.com Review:

A fresh perspective on the spirit of survivors everywhere, Every Second Counts will invigorate and enthrall Armstrongs millions of admirers. Few of Armstrong’s readers will ever compete in the Tour de France (though cyclists will relish Armstrong’s detailed recounting of his 2000-2003 tour victories), but all will relate to his discussions of loss and disappointment in his personal and professional life since 1999.

Armstrongs previous book recounted his journey from a grim diagnosis of testicular cancer, which had spread to his lungs and brain, to a stunning recovery that culminated in his winning the 1999 Tour de Francethe ultimate evidence that he had also won a daunting battle with death. In the opening of Lance Armstrong’s memoir, Every Second Counts (co-authored by Sally Jenkins), he reflects: “Generally, one of the hardest things in the world to do is something twice.” While he is talking here about his preparation for what would prove to be his second consecutive Tour de France victory in 2000, the sentiment could equally be applied to the book itself. They will relate to his battles with petty bureaucracies, like the French court system during the doping scandal that almost halted his career. In so openly using his own life to illustrate how to face this reality, he proves that he truly is a hero–and not just because of the bike. And they will especially relate to constant struggles with work/life balance.

Sally Jenkins is a columnist for the Washington Post

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