A tennis legend tells all.
In a candid, vividly detailed memoir, co-authored by journalists Howard and Vollers, King (b. 1943) recounts her dazzling 30-year career, from her discovery of tennis when she was 10 to her amazing fame as the top player in the U.S., winner of 39 Grand Slam and 20 Wimbledon titles. Doing odd jobs to pay for her first racket, Billie Jean Moffitt was lucky to find encouraging coaches and sympathetic mentors who helped the determined, defiant, and ambitious young girl to hone her talents. She was frustrated, though, to find herself clearly at a disadvantage in a male-dominated sport where women were relegated to amateur status, denied endorsements and travel expenses, and awarded far less prize money than men. It was her husband, Larry King, she writes, who “made me a feminist.” As her visibility increased, she became an outspoken activist against gender inequality, supporting the Equal Rights Amendment and Title IX; lobbying to change the amateur tennis system; and founding the Women’s Tennis Association and the Women’s Sports Foundation. “People’s experience is rarely improved by sitting still in the face of injustice,” she writes. King recounts highlights of some of her most notable contests: against Australian champion Margaret Smith, for example, the young Chris Evert, and especially her tense, much-hyped match against Bobby Riggs in 1973, which was attended by more than 30,000 spectators and seen on TV by more than 90 million people. She won, coming away with $100,000 in prize money and slews of endorsements. King reveals health problems, repeated surgeries, an eating disorder, and an ongoing struggle to define her sexuality. She was horrified when she was outed by a former lover who threatened to blackmail her, which forced her to recognize her latent homophobia. Now retired from playing, she actively promotes LGBTQ+ rights.
A memoir bristling with energy and passion.