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Jennifer Allen (born 1961) is an American author and commentator. She has worked for theNFL Network and as an on-air reporter. She is the daughter of football coachGeorge Allen and sister of politicianGeorge Allen and football executiveBruce Allen.
Allen grew up the only daughter and youngest child of professional football coachGeorge Allen. She has three brothers.George Allen is a formerUnited States Senator andGovernor of Virginia.Bruce was the president and general manager of theWashington Redskins and previously the general manager of theTampa Bay Buccaneers.[1] Greg is a clinical psychologist.
Allen's mother came fromFrench Tunisia and was of aSephardic Jewish background, which became an issue in her brother's 2006 senatorial re-election campaign in Virginia.[2]
Allen is the author of three books, a collection of short stories,Better Get Your Angel On[3] and a memoir,Fifth Quarter: The Scrimmage of a Football Coach's Daughter, describing her childhood as a coach's daughter and relationship that her family had with the members of theLos Angeles Rams and theWashington Redskins that her father coached; as well as the author ofHōkūle'a, Mālama Honua, A Voyage of Hope, a chronicle of the worldwide voyage of a Hawaiian sailing vessel,Hōkūleʻa, which is navigated without modern instruments.
Mālama Honua was published byPatagonia, Inc. in 2017.[4][5] Mālama Honua, which means in "to care for the Earth", Hawaiian, documented the stories of original peoples and environmentalists in countries and island states around the globe. In 2018, the book won the Independent Book Publishers Association Category: Nature and the Environment, Gold Award for non-fiction environmental writing. It also earned Independent Book Publishers Association Silver Award for Coffee Table Book and the Foreword Indies Book Award in the category of Ecology and the Environment.
Pat Conroy calledFifth Quarter "the best book about football I've ever read—and Jennifer Allen never played a down in her life."[6] InThe Washington Post, Jonathan Yardley reviewed the book, noting that in writing about her father, she "illuminates his innermost soul and gives us not just a football coach but a human being.”[7]
The memoir contains claims that George held her by her feet overNiagara Falls,[8] struck her boyfriend in the head with apool cue,[9] threw his brother Bruce through a glass sliding door, tackled his brother Gregory, breaking his collarbone,[10] and dragged Jennifer upstairs by her hair. In the book, she wrote, "George hoped someday to become a dentist...George said he saw dentistry as a perfect profession—getting paid to make people suffer."[10]
In May 2006, Allen qualified some of the claims made in the book.[11] With regards to the pool cue incident, she claimed it was a joke and that "Allen was simply testing her boyfriend's reflexes."With regards to the dentist quote, Allen claims that the book was a "novelization of the past" and written from the perspective of a young girl "surrounded by older brothers and a larger-than-life father." She claims to have a great relationship with her brother and noted that George walked her down the aisle at her wedding.[12]
From 2004 to 2010, Allen contributed to theNFL Network as on-air reporter, focusing on the personal lives of coaches and families in theNational Football League (NFL). In January 2006, she discussed how the firing of a head coach affects the coach's family, basing her commentary on her own experiences when her father was fired.
Since 1996, she has also periodically narrated and reported forNFL Films, including the 2012 "Fearsome Foursome" episode ofA Football Life. Allen has contributed articles toThe New York Times Magazine,George,Play,Rolling Stone,The New York Times, andThe New Republic.[citation needed]
Her journalism has also been anthologized. "Dinner, New Year's Eve, 1968," appeared inFootball, Great Writing About the National Sport. "Boys! Give Me Boys!" appeared inBecause I Said So: 33 Mothers Write About Children, Sex, Men, Aging, Faith, Race, and Themselves, edited by Camille Peri and Kate Moses and published byHarperCollins in 2005.[13] "Euro Disney: A Postcard" was published inParis In Mind: Stories, Essays, and Reflections on the City of Paris, edited by Jennifer Lee and published byVintage Books in 2003.[14]
A graduate ofNew York University (NYU), Allen has taught fiction and non-fiction writing at NYU,Connecticut College,Bennington College, and theUniversity of California, San Diego.