Coming home

Brittney Griner

Book - 2024

"From the nine-time women's basketball icon and two-time Olympic gold medalist--a raw, revelatory account of her unfathomable detainment in Russia and her journey home. On February 17, 2022, Brittney Griner arrived in Moscow ready to spend the WNBA offseason playing for the Russian women's basketball team where she had been the centerpiece of previous championship seasons. Instead, a security checkpoint became her gateway to hell when she was arrested for mistakenly carrying under one gram of medically prescribed hash oil. Brittney's world was violently upended in a crisis she has never spoken in detail about publicly--until now. In Coming Home, Brittney finally shares the harrowing details of her sudden arrest days be...fore Russia invaded Ukraine; her bewilderment and isolation while navigating a foreign legal system amid her trial and sentencing; her emotional and physical anguish as the first American woman ever to endure a Russian penal colony while the #WeAreBG movement rallied for her release; the chilling prisoner swap with Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout; and her remarkable rise from hostage to global spokesperson on behalf of America's forgotten. In haunting and vivid detail, Brittney takes listeners inside the horrors of a geopolitical nightmare spanning ten months. And yet Coming Home is more than Brittney's journey from captivity to freedom. In an account as gripping as it is poignant, she shares how her deep love for Cherelle, her college sweetheart and wife of six years, anchored her during their greatest storm; how her family's support pulled her back from the brink; and how hundreds of letters from friends and neighbors lent her resolve to keep fighting. Coming Home is both a story of survival and a testament to love--the bonds that brought Brittney home to her family, and at last, to herself." -- Random House

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Brittney Griner (author)
Other Authors
Michelle Burford (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiii, 293 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593801345
  • Prologue: Before
  • Part I. Hostage
  • 1. Flight to Hell
  • 2. Daybreak
  • 3. Caged
  • 4. Pops
  • 5. In the Gray
  • Part II. Lockdown
  • 6. Prison Playbook
  • 7. Putin's Pawn
  • 8. Justice Delayed
  • 9. I Plead Sane
  • 10. Spring
  • Part III. Show Trial
  • 11. Wrongfully Detained
  • 12. Rumor Has It
  • 13. On the Line
  • 14. Hearing Disorder
  • 15. Tested
  • 16. Nine Deaths
  • 17. Transitions
  • Part IV. Labor Camp
  • 18. Off the Grid
  • 19. Needled
  • 20. Frozen
  • 21. Taken
  • 22. The Trade
  • Part V. Home
  • 23. Ground Shifts
  • 24. A House Divided
  • 25. Growing Season
  • 26. Home to Me
  • Epilogue: Bring Our Families Home
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The WNBA star recounts her imprisonment by the Putin regime. "My horror begins in a land I thought I knew, on a trip I wish I hadn't taken," writes Griner. She had traveled to Russia before, playing basketball for the Yekaterinburg franchise of the Russian league during the WNBA's off-season, but on this winter day in 2022, she was pulled aside at the Moscow airport and subjected to an unexpected search that turned up medically prescribed cannabis oil. As the author notes, at home in Arizona, cannabis is legal, but not in Russia. After initial interrogation--"They seemed determined to get me to admit I was a smuggler, some undercover drug lord supplying half the country"--she was bundled off to await a show trial that was months in coming. With great self-awareness, the author chronicles the differences between being Black and gay in America and in Russia. "When you're in a system with no true justice," she writes, "you're also in a system with a bunch of gray areas." Unfortunately, despite a skilled Russian lawyer on her side, Griner had trouble getting to those gray areas, precisely because, with rising tensions between the U.S. and Russia following the invasion of Ukraine, Putin's people seemed intent on making an example of her. Between spells in labor camps, jails, and psych wards, the author became a careful observer of the Russian penal system and its horrors. Navigating that system proved exhausting; since her release following an exchange for an imprisoned Russian arms dealer (about which the author offers a le Carré--worthy account of the encounter in Abu Dhabi), she has been suffering from PTSD. That struggle has invigorated her, though, in her determination to free other unjustly imprisoned Americans, a plea for which closes the book. A compelling, often chilling look inside today's version of the Gulag. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.