Published in 2012, Liu Xuan’s memoir Xuanmu offers a look back on the journey that shaped one of China’s most celebrated gymnasts. Written more than a decade after her retirement, it traces her path from a timid, sickly child in Changsha to Olympic champion, while also exploring the personal costs of that transformation.
The opening chapters focus on Liu’s childhood and introduction to gymnastics, providing a vivid portrait of the training culture that defined Chinese gymnastics in the 1980s and early 1990s. Alongside stories of relentless conditioning, competition, and athletic ambition, Liu recalls a childhood marked by contradictions. She disliked many aspects of training, envied classmates who spent their afternoons in school, celebrated bouts of illness because they offered a brief escape from the gym, and at times questioned whether gymnastics was worth the sacrifice at all. Yet she also remembers the coaches, teammates, and family members who sustained her along the way. The result is a rare first-person account of the grueling system that produced generations of elite Chinese gymnasts.
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