The Queen of the Ring

Sex, Muscles, Diamonds, and the Making of an American Legend

Nonfiction, Sports, Individual Sports, Wrestling, Biography & Memoir, History, Americas, United States, 20th Century
Cover of the book The Queen of the Ring by Jeff Leen, Grove Atlantic
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Author: Jeff Leen ISBN: 9780802199935
Publisher: Grove Atlantic Publication: July 13, 2010
Imprint: Grove Press Language: English
Author: Jeff Leen
ISBN: 9780802199935
Publisher: Grove Atlantic
Publication: July 13, 2010
Imprint: Grove Press
Language: English

The story of Mildred Burke, the longest reigning champion of female wrestling, from the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and author of Kings of Cocaine.
 
In this in-depth account, journalist Jeff Leen pulls back the curtain on a forgotten era when a petite midwesterner used her beauty and brawn to dominate America’s most masculine sport.
 
At only five feet two, Mildred Burke was an unlikely candidate for the ring. A waitress barely scraping by on Depression-era tips, she saw her way out when she attended her first wrestling match. When women were still struggling for equality with men, Burke regularly fought—and beat—male wrestlers. Rippling with muscle and dripping with diamonds, she walked the fine line between pin-up beauty and hardened brawler.
 
An unforgettable slice of Americana, *The Queen of the Ring *captures the golden age of wrestling, when one gritty, glamorous woman rose through the ranks to take her place in athletic history.
 
“Jeff Leen has made a fabulous contribution to the sports-history canon. The Queen of the Ring is a marvelous evocation of an era, and a riveting portrait of a one-of-a-kind American moll.” —Sally Jenkins, author of The Real All Americans

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The story of Mildred Burke, the longest reigning champion of female wrestling, from the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and author of Kings of Cocaine.
 
In this in-depth account, journalist Jeff Leen pulls back the curtain on a forgotten era when a petite midwesterner used her beauty and brawn to dominate America’s most masculine sport.
 
At only five feet two, Mildred Burke was an unlikely candidate for the ring. A waitress barely scraping by on Depression-era tips, she saw her way out when she attended her first wrestling match. When women were still struggling for equality with men, Burke regularly fought—and beat—male wrestlers. Rippling with muscle and dripping with diamonds, she walked the fine line between pin-up beauty and hardened brawler.
 
An unforgettable slice of Americana, *The Queen of the Ring *captures the golden age of wrestling, when one gritty, glamorous woman rose through the ranks to take her place in athletic history.
 
“Jeff Leen has made a fabulous contribution to the sports-history canon. The Queen of the Ring is a marvelous evocation of an era, and a riveting portrait of a one-of-a-kind American moll.” —Sally Jenkins, author of The Real All Americans

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