Read one of the best hockey books ever today
Posted: Fri Jul 29, 2005 4:19 am
Picked this up at the library today, couldn't put it down, spent the entire afternoon reading it:
"They Don't Play Hockey In Heaven"
Web Page Name
One of the most motivating books that I have ever read. Certainly gives an inside look at a minor league team.
"They Don't Play Hockey In Heaven"
Web Page Name
From Publishers Weekly
Eight years after his college hockey career ended and two years after a successful brain surgery, Baker, a writer for U.S. Weekly, decided to try to play professional hockey for the first time. After working out at recreational rinks, he made the jump to a low-level minor-league team as an emergency goalie, in the oil-town of Bakersfield, Calif., (surprisingly, a hockey hotbed), for a team willing to take him on in the name of research. In a style that is equal parts George Plimpton-gonzo and Rocky Balboa-triumphalism, the author spends much of the book chronicling the culture of the team and his intense desire to play on it. Indeed, he gets almost no ice time; the story derives its suspense not from the question "how he will play?" but the question "will they ever let him play?". Yet Baker's account maintains a powerful narrative thrust, thanks to the neat structure of a professional sports season and the author's appealing psychological candor. Baker also shows great range-the characters on his team are colorful and the descriptions of life at the lowest echelons of professional sports are as poignant as they are startling. Though he lets in a few cheap lines (he has a tendency toward the maudlin as well as toward locker-room and self-help clichés, and he mentions his brain tumor so often it starts to feel calculating), the narrative remains touching and surprisingly effective.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
One of the most motivating books that I have ever read. Certainly gives an inside look at a minor league team.