Bobbie Rosenfeld : The Olympian Who Could Do Everything
One of Canada's greatest athletes of the 20th century.
Bobbie Rosenfeld may be Canada’s greatest female athlete of the twentieth century. A Canada's Sports Hall of Famer, Bobbie was born in 1904 in a small Russian town and came to Canada with her immigrant parents when she was less than a month old. Her love for all sports showed itself early. As a young girl she excelled in track and field, ice hockey, tennis, basketball and softball. At the 1928 Summer Olympics, held in Amsterdam, she won both gold and silver medals. But Bobbie Rosenfeld’s popularity was due to more than her athletic brilliance, or later, her skills as a sportswriter with the Globe & Mail; she was admired for her strength of character – her decency, honesty and sense of fair play. Anne Dublin's biography of Bobbie is a great read for anyone, of any age. For young athletes, it is simply a must-read.
Praise & Recognition
Association of Jewish Libraries Sydney Taylor Award 2004 - Commended
Canadian Jewish Book Award 2005 - Winner
Frances and Samuel Stein Memorial Award in Children’s Literature 2005 - Winner
IODE Violet Downey Award 2005 - Winner
Ontario Library Association Golden Oak Award for Adult Literacy 2005 - Short-listed
Norma Fleck Award for Children's Non-Fiction Honour Book 2004 - Winner
Details
Publication Date: April 14, 2004
Reading Age: 9 - 12
Genre: Children's Nonfiction
Product Format: Paperback
Pages: 152
ISBN: 978-1-896764-82-5
About the Author
Anne Dublin
More from the author