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The Stick
A history, a celebration, an elegy
The
literary sports title of the season
Pick
up a hockey stick and you hold an iconic symbol of the country that
gave it birth, a tangible piece of our culture, a link to Canada's
past. From the earliest one-piece sticks, carved out of tree roots
by the Mi'kmaqs of Nova Scotia, to the two- and three-piece models
turned out in small towns in Ontario and Quebec, to the graphite
models now produced with scientific precision by Easton, the stick
has always reflected something distinctly Canadian. Today, the stick
has become "cyber-product," globally sourced, anonymously produced,
and expertly marketed. The stick's history, Bruce Dowbiggin shows,
is in many ways the history of the country.
NHL
stars, past and present, talk about their sticks, including Stan
Mikita, who invented the curved blade; Jeremy Roenick, who never
lets anyone else touch his stick; Adam Oates, who uses a stubby,
cut-off blade; and Eric Lindros, whose stick is so stiff most people
can't even bend it. We meet unforgettable off-ice characters: The
London schoolteacher whose basement is a treasure trove of old sticks.
The Calgary handyman who turns broken sticks into children's furniture.
The NHL owner who had his basement floor made out of sticks.
This
is a quirky, unexpected book full of fascinating detail, lore, and
history, destined to become as treasured as an autographed, game-used,
Wayne Gretzky Titan 1002.
Bruce
Dowbiggin has twice won the Gemini Award for excellence in sports
broadcasting. Author of The Defense Never Rests (1993) and Of Ice
and Men (1998), he is currently sports columnist for the Calgary
Herald. He lives in Calgary.
o National
publicity
o Books for Everybody
September
1-55199-055-5 $32.99 Hc
12/carton
Sports
/ Canadian Culture
5 1/2" x 8" 272 pages
11 b/w illustrations
Rights
available: World
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