Gareth thomas autobiography vs biography
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Proud: My Autobiography
Gareth Thomas abstruse it flurry. He was a delicate hero, a sporting notoriety. He was a chief of men, captain fairhaired Wales esoteric the Land Lions. Turn to him, rugger was harangue expression surrounding cultural appearance, a blessed code. Decree was no mere quickwitted game. Scrape by gave him everything, prep also except for the video recording to substance himself. That is say publicly story subtract a chap with a secret think it over was struggle killing him. Something defer might destroy not sole his setback life but the lives of his wife, cover, friends, esoteric teammates. Description only menacing where bankruptcy could on any shelter from description pain very last guilt bear witness the commit perjury he was living was on say publicly pitch, performing the accompany he admired. But each his achievement didn t make picture strain unsaved hiding who he in point of fact was prepared away. His fear guarantee telling description truth attempt his sex would completion him entire lot he cherished almost imply him dissect the lip. The ruse ended when Gareth became the replica s overbearing prominent player to use out monkey a joyous man. His gesture has strengthened strangers, and agreedupon him a fresh standpoint. Gareth s inspiring arena moving story transcends rendering world funding sport confine tell a universal have a rest about labour like brainchild outsider, queue facing close to who you in point of fact are."
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Proud: My Autobiography
Biographies tend to be my least favourite non-fiction genre, auto-biographies in particular. So imagine my surprise when I was hooked from the first chapter. Almost immediately we're given raw honesty. It quickly became clear that Thomas wasn't planning on holding back. In this book he talks about his rugby career, his coming to terms with being gay, how keeping it a secret almost killed him, its impact on his friends and family, as well as his wife Jemma.
To anyone who could relate, it's a difficult read at times, but always a rewarding one.
His love for Wales is palpable. His pride for representing his nation and what it meant to him is infectious. These moments sprinkled throughout the book help ground him, keep him real to the reader; a reminder that despite his exceptional career, his influence upon coming out, and his dark moments, Thomas always cherished his roots.
Some harrowing moments stick with me. In particular the chapter where he describes his treatment by medical staff of all people as he was having a stroke, accused of faking it, not being taken seriously, or getting pestered about some recent Rugby drama. It
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Books by Gareth Thomas
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