Ebook {Epub PDF} No Finish Line: My Life as I See It by Marla Runyan
In , she co-wrote and published her autobiography, No Finish Line: My Life As I See It. She married her coach, Matt Lonergan, in , with whom she had a daughter in Although Runyan had hoped to make the Olympic team, back problems and surgery prevented www.doorway.ru: Sally Jenkins. · In , she co-wrote and published her autobiography ‘No Finish Line: My Life As I See It’ EUGENE, Ore. Marla Runyan, the first legally blind athlete to compete in the Olympics, can't read a standard eye chart below the enormous www.doorway.ruted Reading Time: 8 mins. · With endearing self-deprecation and surprising wit, Marla Runyan reveals what it’s like to see the world through her eyes, and what it means to compete at the world-class level, despite the fact 5/5(1).
Buy No Finish Line: My Life as I See It Abridged by Jenkins, Sally, Runyan, Marla, Marla Runyan and Sally Jenkins (ISBN: ) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. No Finish Line: My Life As I See It: Runyan, Marla, Jenkins, Sally: www.doorway.ru: Libros. Saltar al contenido www.doorway.ru Hola Elige tu dirección Libros Hola, Identifícate. Cuenta y Listas Cuenta Devoluciones y Pedidos. Carrito Todo. Los Más Vendidos AmazonBasics. What can readers expect from your autobiography No Finish Line: My Life As I See It and how did you find writing your life story?. I co-authored my autobiography, No Finish Line, with Sally Jenkins and it was published in The process was a bit intense and it required that I reflect on moments in my life that I had not given much thought to.
With self-deprecation and surprising wit, Marla reveals what it's like to see the world through her eyes, how it feels to grow up "disabled" in a society where expectations are often based on perceived abilities, and what it means to compete at the world-class level despite the fact that--quite literally, for her--there is no finish line. MARLA RUNYAN was inspired by the Olympics from a young age but had no idea she would one day compete in them and certainly not in the circumstances in which she did. At the age of nine Marla was diagnosed with stargardts disease, leaving her legally blind and those around her worried about the restrictions it would put on her life. With self-deprecation and surprising wit, Marla reveals what it’s like to see the world through her eyes, how it feels to grow up “disabled” in a society where expectations are often based on perceived abilities, and what it means to compete at the world-class level despite the fact that—quite literally, for her—there is no finish line.
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