AUDIOBOOK

Make It Count

My Fight to Become the First Transgender Olympic Runner

Cecé Telfer
(0)
Duration
12h 20m
Year
2024
Language
English

About

By turns harrowing and hopeful, “Make It Count” is the inspiring story of the first openly transgender woman to win a NCAA title, following her traditional upbringing in Jamaica, her fight to become a US citizen, and her efforts to achieve her Olympic dreams.

CeCé Telfer is a warrior. The first openly transgender woman to win an NCAA championship, she has contended with transphobia on and off the track since childhood. Now, she stands at the crossroads of a national and international conversation about equity in sports, forced to advocate for her personhood and rights at every turn. After spending years training for the 2024 Olympics, Telfer has been sidelined and silenced more times than she can count. But she's never been good at taking no for an answer.

“Make It Count” is Telfer's raw and inspiring story. From coming of age in Jamaica, where she grew up hearing a constant barrage of slurs, to beginning her new life in Toronto and then New Hampshire, where she realized what running could offer her, to living in the backseat of her car while searching for a coach, to Mexico, where she trained for the US Trials, this book follows the arc of Telfer's Olympic dream.

This is the story of running on what feels like the edge of a knife, of what it means to compete when you're not just an athlete but treated like a walking controversy. But it's also the story of resilience and athleticism, of a runner who found a clarity in her sport that otherwise eluded her, a sense of being simply alive on this earth, a human moving through space. Finally, herself.

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Reviews

Author and narrator CeC� Telfer shares her compelling and timely story in this candid memoir. Born in Jamaica, CeC� knew she was female from a very early age but faced cultural and family pressure to hide her authentic self. CeC�'s delivery is passionate and raw; she doesn't shy away from heartbreaking details. However, her narration is disjointed in parts. As she travels from Jamaica to Canada an
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