Frozen in Time: The Enduring Legacy of the 1961 U.S. Figure Skating Team
By (Author) Nikki Nichols
Emmis Books
Emmis Books
2nd February 2009
First Trade Paper Edition
United States
General
Non Fiction
796.912
Paperback
264
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
368g
Read the deeply moving and impeccably researched account of the events surrounding the plane crash that killed the 1961 US figure skating team.
Only once has the United States lost an entire national team to disaster: 1961, when all eighteen members of the US figure skating team died in the crash of Sabena Flight 548. Sixteen family members, coaches, and friends died with them. Frozen in Time takes you, for the first time ever, inside the lives of these skaters, revealing their friendships and romances, rivalries, sacrifices, and triumphs.
The skaters youll read about were the top finishers at the 1961 US National Championships. Winning a medal at Nationals earned each skater passage aboard Sabena Flight 548, a state-of-the-art Boeing 707. The plane would take them to Brussels, where they planned to board a new plane for Prague, host city of the 1961 World Figure Skating Championships. Some of the skaters brought parents or older siblings as chaperones. Coaches and judges also boarded the plane, and some of them brought spouses and children. When the plane crashed in a Belgian field on February 15, entire families were shattered, and the American skating program suffered a staggering blow that threatened to cripple it for many years.
Frozen in Time takes you on a journey to experience the highly competitive US National and North American championships of that fateful year. This story takes place in the final days of what now seems like an antique era, when the world was black and white, when figure skating was not a well-publicized sport. The book portrays strong, accomplished women leading unconventional lives on a national stage in a conservative era. The story of the Owen and Westerfeld womenalong with all the dedicated athletestranscends the world of sport and touches the human heart. It is one of the most powerful and tragic stories in the history of American sports.
. . . a reverential tribute. Skating enthusiasts will want to add this to the shelf.
Publishers Weekly
Frozen in Time is the beautiful, heart-wrenching story of the eighteen members of the U.S. figure skating team of 1961 and the sudden tragedy that took them from us at the summit of their achievement.
Senator Edward M. Kennedy
Nichols does a masterful job of seamlessly weaving together this long-ago era with the contemporary world of the sport. It is a terrific and informative read.
International Figure Skating magazine
The sensitivity of the writer will touch every skating fan in what may be one of the ten best-written sports books of the year.
Barry Federovitch, Trenton Times
A moving tribute to the skaters who died for their sport.
Indianapolis Star
Written with an insiders perspective, Frozen in Time is a painstaking and heart-breaking love letter to the sport as well as to those who perished in the crash. I highly recommend it whether or not you are a skating fan.
Jennifer Woodlief, author of Ski to Die and A Wall of White
Nikki Nichols is a senior writer for International Figure Skating Magazine and also serves as a copyeditor for the magazine. She has written for Skating Magazine, Indianapolis Monthly, and numerous other trade publications and journals. Nikki had successful careers in television news and public relations before writing this, her rst book. She skates competitively, having won a gold medal at the Indiana State Championships, a gold and silver at the 2004 Midwestern Adult Sectional, and a bronze medal at the 2007 US Adult Figure Skating Championships in the Interpretive event. She is a two-time nalist in the adult silver ladies free skate at the US Adult Nationals. She also notched a fth-place nish in Adult Gold Pairs at the 2007 Adult Nationals, which she did with her pairs partner and husband, Michael Cunningham. The two had their rst child, Thomas, in April of 2008. They reside just south of Indianapolis, Indiana.