(MAR 13) Boxing is more than
just an escape from the chaos of the streets or the baggage of
what’s behind to those who find their way into the gym, and
ultimately, the ring. Boxing can be the road – and has been for
many over the generations in hard scrabble America – to the way
in life.
That’s the story shared by Alicia
Doyle in her nonfiction memoir Fighting Chance, chronicling the
young journalist’s unlikely emancipation from her life’s
hardships through immersion into the “sweet science” of boxing.
“The book takes us back to the
childhood and life that gave rise to her inner demons, through
her amateur and brief pro boxing career, and the two decades
since she hung up the gloves,” said Brent Weber, author of The
Sports Guy: Scorecard Scribblings From An Ordinary Journalist.
Based on a true story, Fighting Chance is written by an
award-winning journalist who discovered boxing at age
twenty-eight in the late 1990s when she went on assignment at a
boxing gym for at-risk youth called Kid Gloves. For two years,
Doyle simultaneously worked as a newspaper reporter while
training and competing as a boxer, making her one of only a few
hundred women in America who infiltrated this male-dominated
sport. During her boxing career, she won two Golden Gloves
championship titles and earned three wins by knockout – and her
pro debut at age thirty in the year 2000 was named The
California Female Fight of the Year. Fighting Chance offers an
inside look at what’s considered the toughest sport known to
man.
Fighting Chance features
“excellent dialogue and heartfelt memories, with a journalist's
passion for the hard, honest truth about life, and how boxing
helped her through tough times,” Weber said.
“Fighting Chance is highly recommended to any adult or young
adult,” said Weber, noting that there is profanity, just like
you would hear in a boxing ring, so it's not for tender ears.
“Boxing fans will love it, but so will anyone, particularly any
woman, who wonders which way to look when knocked down to the
canvas.”
Doyle is a shining example of an
individual who continues to fight to save herself from the dark
side of life by mentoring troubled young children at Kid Gloves,
said producer and director Rod Holcomb, adding that “she is
their guiding light, a light that doesn’t often shine for them.
Fighting Chance is exactly that, a chance to survive in the ring
and in life. A must read.”
Layla McCarter, an eight-time,
five-division Boxing World Champion and California Boxing Hall
of Fame inductee, said that Fighting Chance is “absorbing and
brilliant.”
“Over 22 years ago I shared the ring with Alicia Doyle...twice,”
said McCarter, whose bouts against Doyle are featured in the
novel. “Fighting Chance transported me back to relive those
experiences from her perspective. It was amazing. I highly
recommend this book.”
Fighting Chance is available on
Amazon and Barnes and Noble. For more information, visit
https://aliciadoyle.com/. For an autographed copy, email alicia@aliciadoyle.com.