Coming Home

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • A TIME MUST-READ BOOK OF THE YEAR From the nine-time women’s basketball icon and two-time Olympic gold medalist—a raw, revelatory account of her unfathomable detainment in Russia and her journey home.

“Compelling . . . An intimate, honest recollection of Griner’s time held captive in Russia. Coming Home reads as a deeply personal, publicly powerful documentation of what happened—what is still happening—to her body and mind.” —Slate


On February 17, 2022, Brittney Griner arrived in Moscow ready to spend the WNBA offseason playing for the Russian women’s basketball team where she had been the centerpiece of previous championship seasons. Instead, a security checkpoint became her gateway to hell when she was arrested for mistakenly carrying under one gram of medically prescribed hash oil. Brittney’s world was violently upended in a crisis she has never spoken in detail about publicly—until now.

In Coming Home, Brittney finally shares the harrowing details of her sudden arrest days before Russia invaded Ukraine; her bewilderment and isolation while navigating a foreign legal system amid her trial and sentencing; her emotional and physical anguish as the first American woman ever to endure a Russian penal colony while the #WeAreBG movement rallied for her release; the chilling prisoner swap with Russian arms dealer Viktor Bout; and her remarkable rise from hostage to global spokesperson on behalf of America’s forgotten. In haunting and vivid detail, Brittney takes readers inside the horrors of a geopolitical nightmare spanning ten months.  

And yet Coming Home is more than Brittney’s journey from captivity to freedom. In an account as gripping as it is poignant, she shares how her deep love for Cherelle, her college sweetheart and wife of six years, anchored her during their greatest storm; how her family’s support pulled her back from the brink; and how hundreds of letters from friends and neighbors lent her resolve to keep fighting. Coming Home is both a story of survival and a testament to love—the bonds that brought Brittney home to her family, and at last, to herself.

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Published May 7, 2024

320 pages

Average rating: 6.91

11 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

hideTurtle
Aug 15, 2024
7/10 stars
"On February 15, I left Phoenix in a frenzy... Three hellish days later, just before dawn, I lost my freedom, my peace, my life as I'd known it." By no means a lighthearted enjoyable memoir, Brittney's recounting of her experience as an unusually tall, masculin-presenting black woman in the Russian prison system is honest, raw, and captivating. Interspersed between the events of 2022, she shares parts of her personal life and upbringing that informed her perspectives, offering a richer understanding of her approach to the unique challenges she faces every day. Some have asserted that Brittney has not accepted responsibility for her wreckless behaviour and is playing victim in an attempt to capitalize. There is a belief that her status as an elite athlete was ultimately what saved her from having to serve her full sentence and that most others would not have been afforded the same luxury. There are some less-than-flattering stories about Brittney's very messy breakup with another basketball player that suggest that she is violent and not a good person. However, over and over again as I read this book, I found her to be self-depricating, vulnerable and very much a human being who survived a harrowing ordeal and lived to tell the tale despite the challenge that living post-trauma presented. Brittney is deserving of empathy, her stamina and survival instict worthy of respect.

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