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The Road to Canada
- Book Four - Girls of Summer
- Narrated by: Britney Gil
- Length: 6 hrs and 2 mins
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Summary
The first three books of the Girls of Summer series introduced Emma Blakeley and Jamie Maxwell, two young athletes with bright soccer futures. Now, in The Road to Canada, a staffing change on the US Women’s National Team (USWNT) shortly before the 2015 World Cup has altered the playing field for both women.
For Jamie, a new coach means a renewed shot at making the World Cup roster for the top-ranked squad in the world. For Emma, the shift in priorities means that for the first time in her adult life, she isn’t sure she’ll be on the field - or even on the team - for a major championship.
Who will make the final cut for a chance to stand on top of the winner’s podium in Vancouver? To find out, join Jamie and Emma for the latest installment in the ongoing story of their lives, loves, and would-be world championships in The Road to Canada, book four of the bestselling series.
What listeners say about The Road to Canada
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- Jude
- 04-10-19
I love this series!
I love this series. I’m not so much a soccer fan as a fan of how Kate Christie writes about soccer (we call it football here). Reading about Jamie Maxwell, Emma Blakeley and the others, I find myself rooting for an imaginary team and it’s kinda exciting and wonderful.
This is book 4 of the Girls of Summer series and it is definitely not a standalone. If you haven’t read them yet, I’d recommend starting at the beginning, with Training Ground then Game Time and Outside the Lines.
When we first met Jamie and Emma, they were teenagers and already crazy talented soccer players. They went on to have very different careers, Emma’s dreams coming true quite quickly whereas Jamie had a much more troubled path to navigate.
One of the things I like best about GoS is how Jamie was stopped in her tracks by injury and her struggles to make it back to the top. In this book, she’s a temporary part of the national team, not sure from one game to the other that she’ll get to stay on. She needs to prove herself again and again and she never lets go of that goal (no pun intended). At the same time she tries to hold on to her relationship with Emma, who is clearly the love of her life despite everything that’s happened between them in the twelve years they’ve known each other. And at this time in her life, she also has to deal once again with the memory of the assault she had to live through as a teenager (a few months before she met Emma in book 1), as her club (Arsenal) is playing in Lyon, where the assault took place. As a French reader, I at times felt like I should apologize to Jamie about what happened to her in France. I love how the author dealt with that trip and Jamie’s memories. I also liked that Emma’s success wasn’t as much a given as she’d gotten used to. Not that I want her to have to go through tough times too, but that’s how life works.
Kate Christie wrote about how she had to decide whether to allow Jamie and Emma’s story to expand or limit it. She chose the former, so book 4 became books 4 and 5. As much as I understand her decision to do so, this book feels more like a transition than a novel in its own right. I’m going to have to get to book 5 (which got to use the series title Girls of Summer as its own) ASAP, because while getting to Canada was an interesting journey, it’s high time we made it there.
The Road to Canada is Kate Christie’s first audiobook, so I had read the first three books and listened to this one. It makes for a different experience, and it was interesting. The narration is pretty good, Britney Gil managed to convey the excitment of the games (it could have been boring if done wrong), and I rather liked her voice for Emma, though I wish the other voices had been more distinctive. But it was good, all in all.
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