So, I was browsing through sports biographies the other day, and 'I Felt the Cheers: The Remarkable Silent Life of Curtis Pride' caught my eye. At first glance, I thought it might be a fictional underdog story, but a quick dive into the details revealed something even more inspiring—it’s absolutely based on real life. Curtis Pride is a former MLB player who overcame being deaf to carve out a career in professional baseball, which is just incredible.
What makes this book stand out isn’t just the sports angle, though that’s thrilling enough. It’s the way it delves into Pride’s personal journey, the barriers he faced, and how he connected with fans despite not being able to hear their cheers. The title itself is such a poetic nod to that. If you’re into stories about resilience, or even just love baseball, this one’s a must-read. I finished it feeling like I’d learned something new about perseverance.
You know those stories that make you pause and think, 'Wow, life really is stranger than fiction'? That’s how I felt when I stumbled upon Curtis Pride’s biography. The man’s career is straight out of a movie script—except it’s all true. From his early days navigating a world without sound to stepping onto major league fields, the book doesn’t shy away from the gritty details. What stuck with me was how it captures the loneliness and triumph of his journey. The writing’s got this raw honesty that makes you root for him even though you already know how it ends. And that title? Genius. It sums up the whole experience in one line. Definitely a story worth knowing, especially if you’re into sports or human interest tales.
True story, no embellishments needed. Curtis Pride’s life is dramatic enough on its own—deaf since birth, yet playing professional baseball? That’s the kind of stuff legends are made of. The book’s strength lies in its honesty; it doesn’t turn him into a saint or a martyr. He’s just a guy who loved the game and refused to let anything stop him. The quieter moments, like his interactions with fans who didn’t know how to react to a deaf player, are what stayed with me. It’s a quick read but packs a punch.
Oh, it’s 100% real! Curtis Pride’s story is one of those where you almost can’t believe it’s not fiction. The book does a fantastic job of balancing his baseball career with the broader challenges of being a deaf athlete in a hearing-dominated space. I love how it doesn’t just focus on the glory moments but also the little struggles—like communicating with teammates or the emotional weight of silent stadiums. It’s uplifting without sugarcoating anything. After reading, I found myself googling old clips of his games just to see the man in action.
I picked up this book expecting a standard sports memoir, but it’s so much more. Curtis Pride’s life is a testament to what determination looks like when the odds are stacked against you. The 'true story' aspect is what hit me hardest—knowing that every setback and victory actually happened adds this layer of awe. The book’s structure is neat, too; it weaves his personal growth with his athletic career in a way that feels natural, not forced. And the title? Perfect. It’s a reminder that triumph doesn’t always come with fanfare. If you’re looking for something that’ll leave you inspired, this is it.
2025-12-14 17:24:57
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When Silence Met Fire
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She came to campus to disappear. He rules it without trying. When silence meets fire, something has to burn.
Maya Chen has one goal at Crestview State University: remain invisible. A guarded first-year Software Engineering student, she's learned the hard way that closeness only leads to pain. After a public betrayal in high school, Maya keeps her head down, her grades high, and her heart locked away.
Idris Vaughan is everything she avoids. Final-year Architecture student, campus debate champion, and magnetic in ways he doesn't have to try. Beneath his confidence, he's suffocating under his father's expectations and a reputation he never asked for.
When Maya challenges him publicly, she doesn't fall at his feet like everyone else. And that unsettles him.
Promise was born into silence — a silence woven from an oath made before she could speak. Her village called it tradition. Her mother called it survival. But to Promise, it was a prison.
She dreamed of Lagos, of lights and cameras, of a life that stretched beyond clay walls and whispered fears. Yet when the truth of her birth is revealed, everything she longs for seems impossibly far. The elders insist she must never leave. Her mother pleads with her to stay. And the weight of generations threatens to bury her voice.
Between love and loyalty, fear and freedom, Promise must choose whether to surrender to a curse or defy it — even if it means breaking her world apart.
The Girl Who Broke the Silence is a sweeping tale of tradition and defiance, of love and survival. It is the story of one girl’s fight to claim her name in a world that tried to silence her.
After years of running from her past, Lissa returns to the one place she never wanted to see again—her childhood home. The town hasn’t changed, but Lissa has. Now a mother, a wife, and a survivor, she’s trying to rebuild a life while standing on the crumbling foundation of her trauma.
Just a few months. Just until she finds her footing. But the house doesn’t let go so easily. It smells of mildew and memory. Dust covers more than furniture—it coats every secret Lissa tried to bury.
As she navigates motherhood, old friendships, and a strained relationship with her sister, Lissa discovers more than ghosts in the attic. A photograph violently scribbled out. A letter from someone she hoped was lost to time. And a journal that brings her back to the girl she used to be.
Her husband, Colt, tries to be her anchor. Her son, Lucas, is her reason to fight. But a single name—just one letter, T—is all it takes to fracture her resolve.
The past isn’t dead. It’s waiting in the basement. In a letter tucked behind old receipts. In the quiet corners of her memory where no one else can go.
As the days pass, the house begins to feel like a trap.Lissa must decide if she’s strong enough to dig through the wreckage of her past… or if some secrets are better left buried.
Told with raw emotion and atmospheric suspense, House of Quiet Screams is a story of trauma, resilience, and the silent strength it takes to confront what once felt un faceable. For Lissa, surviving was never the end of the story—facing what comes after might be the beginning.
This is a poignant and sensory rich coming of age story set in the vibrant, bustling heart of Lagos. It follows Tobi, a young boy trapped behind a barrier of selective muteness, whose internal world is a vivid "library of stories" that he cannot vocalize.
The narrative explores the transformative power of art and the deep, ancestral bond between Tobi and his Grandpa. When Grandpa gifts him a set of professional art supplies and the secret name Soji ("The One Who Wakes the World"), Tobi finds a new medium for his voice. By transforming a weathered neighborhood shed into a massive, multi textured mural blending brilliant acrylics with the rich fabrics of his heritage. Tobi finally bridges the gap between his silent exterior and his thunderous spirit. Ultimately, the story is a celebration of finding one's "truth," proving that silence isn't a prison when you have the courage to let your colors shout.
Ever since my wife, Allison Strong, gives birth to our son, Noel Russell, she becomes unable to speak.
The doctors say it is likely a psychological issue. For three whole years, she does not say a single word to me.
Even when there's a gas leak in the house, she simply waits for me to discover it myself. When Noel cries from hunger, she never tries to comfort him.
After my company goes bankrupt, I don't even have time to grieve. I spend my days delivering packages to support the family while taking my wife to see psychologists and specialists.
One day, I am dead tired after working from morning until night. As I back my car into the garage, I fail to notice that Allison has left three-year-old Noel to play behind the vehicle.
The moment I feel the car roll over something, my gut tells me something is very wrong.
Noel's cries last only a few moments before he falls silent.
My legs nearly give out beneath me.
Forcing myself to stay upright, I scoop up Noel and rush him to the hospital with my hands trembling uncontrollably.
Meanwhile, Allison stands silently somewhere to the side.
Just like always, she says nothing. Her expression remains absolutely unfazed. Though she is the one who has given birth to Noel, everything seems completely unrelated to her.
I have a mental breakdown.
Grabbing her by the shoulders, I shake her desperately and yell, "You saw what was happening, why didn't you warn me? Why did you let him play there? What kind of psychological problem do you have that you can just stand by and watch your own son die?
"Are you trying to destroy me, Allison?"
I scream hysterically, but she still does not open her mouth or make a sound.
Despair engulfs me. Three years of complete silence from her crushes me.
Just when I am about to give up, Allison pushes through the crowd and softly speaks her first words in three years.
They are quiet, but I hear them clearly.
"Clarence..."
Clarence Welch is the name of her first love.
Only then do I realize that her psychological issue is with Noel and me.
Those words defined Claire Reid's entire life—and her death. At twenty-eight, she dies in a hospital bed surrounded by the family she sacrificed everything for: the father who forced her to quit school, the sister who took everything she had, the husband who treated her like an inconvenience, and the mother who demanded endless gratitude for their abuse. As her heart stops, Claire sees their relief and realizes the devastating truth: she wasted her life loving people who never loved her back.
Then she wakes up. One year earlier. One month before her family frames her for theft.
This time, Claire refuses. Refuses to give money. Refuses to stay silent. Refuses to be grateful for crumbs. Armed with knowledge of their betrayals and a fury born from her wasted first life, she systematically dismantles their manipulations, exposes their schemes, and reclaims her identity. But when she tries to leave her cold, arranged marriage, something unexpected happens.
Reading 'I Felt the Cheers: The Remarkable Silent Life of Curtis Pride' was such an emotional journey for me. Curtis Pride's story isn't just about overcoming adversity—it's about redefining what's possible. Born deaf, he faced countless barriers in a world built for hearing people, yet he carved out a career in professional baseball, a sport where communication is everything. The book doesn't sugarcoat his struggles; instead, it shows how he turned every 'no' into fuel.
What really struck me was how his resilience wasn't just about brute determination. It was his adaptability—learning to read lips, using visual cues, and earning respect through sheer skill. The moments where teammates initially doubted him, only to become his biggest advocates, hit hard. It's a reminder that resilience isn't a solo act; it's about building bridges even when others can't see the path.