Breaking Through

Heroes in Canadian Women's Sport

by Sue Irwin

Profiles of Canadian women athletes who are breaking down barriers and taking the game for themselves.

This book highlights the achievements of Canadian women sports stars — the role models of today's young female athletes. They fought for the right to compete in sports traditionally dominated by men and proved that women's sports are just as competitive and exciting to watch as men's. Spanning decades, Breaking Through focuses on seven sports and the women who made them their own, including well-known legends such as soccer player Christine Sinclair, who brought women's soccer in Canada into the limelight, and hockey player Hayley Wickenheiser, the longest-serving member of Canada's National team and five-time Olympic medalist. Readers will also see basketball, bobsleigh and rugby represented and learn the stories of less well-known athletes such as Indigenous Cross-country skiers Sharon Anne and Shirley Firth, who faced down prejudice, and Carol Hunyh, who brought home Canada's first Olympic gold medal in women's wrestling.

About the Author

Sue Irwin
SUE IRWIN is a teacher and author. Her writing has been published in a variety of children's publications and won several awards. Her first Lorimer Recordbook, Safety Stars, was nominated for the 2017 Non-fiction Silver Birch Award, on the Canadian Children Book Centre's Best Books for Kids and Teens list, and won the Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario's Curriculum Development Award. She lives in the Niagara Region.

Reviews

"[Breaking Through is] a book that encompasses the spirit of female athleticism in Canada, and it contains a number of stories that are important to tell."
Allison Giggey, teacher-librarian, CM: Canadian Review of Materials

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