Serena Williams is using her new-found freedom from tennis to write a tell-all ‘intimate’ memoir, and has signed a two-book deal with Random House Publishing.
Williams stepped away from the sporting limelight last summer and – despite flirting with a return – has now revealed her next move.
The tennis great has agreed a two-book deal with the Random House Publishing Group, and will begin with an ‘intimate’ memoir in which she will open up about everything from her childhood and early tennis training, dramatized in the 2021 film ‘King Richard,’ to her extraordinary career and the obstacles and setbacks she endured along the way.
The book is not yet titled and does not have a release date, but the announcement has already sent her fans wild on social media.
‘For so long, all I was focused on was winning, and I never sat down to look back and reflect on my life and career,’ Williams, who in August gave birth to her second child, said in a statement Wednesday.
Serena Williams is continuing to enjoy her life after retiring from the world of tennis
She dominated on the court for so long and is now writing a memoir about her incredible life
Serena poses, left, with her husband Alexis, and two daughters Olympia and Adira
The book is not yet titled and does not have a release date, but the announcement has already sent her fans wild on social media.
‘For so long, all I was focused on was winning, and I never sat down to look back and reflect on my life and career,’ Williams, who in August gave birth to her second child, said in a statement Wednesday.
‘Over the last year I´ve really enjoyed taking the time with my growing family to celebrate my accomplishments and explore my other passions. I couldn’t be at a more perfect place to be able to take-on such a personal intimate project, and there’s no one I would rather do it with than the team at Random House.’
The second book, also untitled, will be an ‘inspirational’ work, according to Random House, which announced that ‘Williams will offer rules for living that draw on her experiences as a philanthropist and advocate, her career as an investment unicorn with Serena Ventures, and someone who has long sought to lift a diverse and emergent generation of young women whose aspirations are not confined to the court.’
Williams, 42, announced her retirement – famously eschewing that term and saying instead she was ‘evolving’ away from professional tennis – shortly before the 2022 U.S. Open.
She has not played since that tournament, which included a second-round victory over No. 2-ranked Anett Kontaveit before a third-round loss to Ajla Tomljanovic.
Williams left the sport with 23 Grand Slam titles in singles, another 14 in doubles with her sister Venus, more than 300 weeks at No. 1 in the rankings and four Olympic gold medals. She also has been widely cited for breaking down racial barriers in tennis and racial and gender barriers in sports and beyond.
In an essay published in Vogue last year, she wrote that she hoped that because of her success ‘women athletes feel that they can be themselves on the court. They can play with aggression and pump their fists. They can be strong yet beautiful. They can wear what they want and say what they want and kick butt and be proud of it all.’