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When he summons her for an early-morning meeting and she arrives at his office to find him dead, an apparent suicide, she keeps that a secret, too, leaving his body to be discovered by someone else. She has secrets in the present, too, notably her long-term affair with Michael Sayles, who is married, White, and her boss in Houghton Transportation’s legal department. To rise, Ellice has carefully shaped her image-and left out certain pieces of her past, like her childhood in a small, grindingly poor Georgia town where some very bad things happened before she escaped via a scholarship to an elite boarding school. As a Black woman, she’s dealt with barriers other lawyers haven’t, especially in Atlanta, a city that, despite its vibrant and diverse present, hasn’t shed its racist history. Success hasn’t been easy for Ellice Littlejohn. A seat on the executive board should be a professional peak for a corporate lawyer. The drawings are the highlight, but the story just leaves me unsatisfied. I'm disappointed in this book about the Olympics, about which there are surprisingly few books. "I realized today has been terrific practice for the Winter Olympics!" "I realized something very important today!" he says. His comically glittery outfit and horribly spell-binding routine help him earn a spot near the bottom. Instead, she lauds him and says how proud she is of him for trying. Shortly after quitting, an annoying journalist interviews his mom, expecting her to go on about her embarrassment and shame of her son. And after losing horribly at each sport and having a chipper attitude, he finally loses it and throws an oinker of a tantrum. This pig does not know the term "specialization of labor." Or of sports. He competes in a wide variety of events-running, weight lifting, wrestling, vaulting, boxing, and hurdles, to name a few. Boomer decides that he'll be in the Olympics, and he trains a little before his Olympic debut. So, let me tell you a story about Boomer the Pig. I know, I know.the Olympics are completely over. The Triumphant Story of an Underdog: Olympig! by Victoria Jamieson |