In 2012, Suzy Favor Hamilton admitted that she had worked as a call girl under the name "Kelly Lundy."

Last year, the Big Ten decided to take away her award, the "Big Ten Female Athlete of the Year," which was formally named after her. The now disgraced 46-year-old runner has opened up about her life off the track. Hamilton has admitted her actions were wrong several times and has said, " I am not a victim here, and I knew what I was doing."

Hamilton has also told reporters that her husband, Mark, knew about the prostitutions.

Hamilton's new book is titled "Fast Girl: Running From Madness," and is scheduled to be released on Amazon June 9, 2015. The 320-page book goes into detail about Hamilton's personal life as a Las Vegas call girl and her career as a runner. Hamilton reportedly made $600 an hour, $4,000 for two hours and $6,000 for 24 hours.

You can view her call girl profile here.

After being caught, Hamilton lost a lot of sponsorship adds and was even banned from competing at the Disneyland Marathon.

On the track, Hamilton represented the United Stated in the 1992, 1996 and 2002 Summer Olympics. She never won a medal, but she did win many outdoor championships. To make matters worse, Hamilton had a bad reputation of intentionally falling down in the middle of races when she knew she couldn't win.

Hamilton currently lives in Wisconsin (where she was born), and she has undergone numerous therapeutic sessions since being exposed. Hamilton hasn't gone into a lot of details about her new book, but she recently said on her website that "depression" played a role in her actions. Hamilton now works as a yoga instructor, and she has a young daughter.

"I was drawn to escorting in large part because it provided many coping mechanisms for me when I was going through a very challenging time with my marriage and my life. It provided an escape from a life that I was struggling in. It was a double life," Hamilton said.

Throughout her life, Hamilton has dealt with a lot of animosity and depression. She had an eating disorder when she ran track at the University of Wisconsin and her brother, Dan Favor, committed suicide in 1999. As previously stated, Hamilton would sometimes intentionally fall down during a race because she couldn't deal with the depression of losing normally.

"Fast Girl: Running From Madness" is being published by "Dey Street Books," and will be available in hardcover in June 2015.

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