July 8, 2008

As The Puck Turns by Brian Conacher

Brian Conacher was not even close to a superstar hockey player or an innovating coach or manager. In fact, it was not until he began broadcasting that you could accuse him of being a household name amongst hockey fans. And that was quite some time ago now.

Though he was a journeyman player from some time ago, he was a keen observer of the game of hockey like few others. And he lived a vagabond life of hockey that led to one of the most diverse and unique outlooks on both hockey and undoubtedly life.

And Conacher shares many of his experiences and outlooks in his 2007 autobiography As the Puck Turns: A Personal Journey Through the World of Hockey. The book is published by Wiley.

| Buy at - Amazon - Chapters |

Conacher was born into hockey royalty. He is the son of Lionel "Big Train" Conacher, Canada's athlete of the half century in 1950. His uncle was none other than Charlie "Big Bomber" Conacher. Another uncle, Roy Conacher, and two cousins, Peter Conacher and Murray Henderson, also played in the National Hockey League.


Conacher played at every level of hockey, including junior, university, international, Olympic, AHL, WHA and NHL. He is best associated with Father David Bauer's Canadian national team program where he parts of 5 seasons, including the 1964 Olympics. However many fans will remember him as a fringe player on the roster of the last Toronto Maple Leafs team that won the Stanley Cup in 1967.


Interestingly, Conacher begins the narrative of his life after the ‘67 Cup win. I personally found that to be disappointing, because I really wanted to know more about his youth and upbringing in the famous Conacher family, as well as his time with Father Bauer's Nats. He does sparsely talk about these topics later on. He barely mentions his time with the Leafs though, downplaying his own NHL accomplishments unnecessarily.


For a fringe player who was essentially out of the league after a couple of seasons, Conacher's journey sure offers lots of hockey history to observe. And the book really grabs the reader's attention that way immediately.


He would rejoin the Canadian national team just in time for one of the most volatile periods of international hockey history. He would go on to a broadcasting career highlighted by his job as colorman for the legendary Foster Hewitt in the 1972 Summit Series. He would then make a come back, bouncing around mostly the minor leagues as well as the NHL and WHA. He would also become a manager in the minor leagues and with the WHA Edmonton Oilers.


Conacher, who drew a lot of ire from the NHL over the years for his willingness to challenge conventional wisdom, keeps his beliefs in tact as he offers interesting observations on all of his tour stops.


His love for the international game remains evident, even though he was rightfully jaded over the way the IIHF and especially it's leader Bunny Ahearn blatantly cheated the Canadians. He keeps his beliefs in check as he beautifully broadcasts the Summit Series. In the book though he openly laments hockey violence as shown by the Canadians, as well as Canadian ignorance of the international game, the Soviet players and Father Bauer's Nats.

I knew I'd lap up anything Conacher had to say about international hockey in the 1960s and 1970s, as this is a passion of mine. But I was more than happy to read beyond these opening chapters, as Conacher joins a team and league most of us have never heard of - the Mohawk Valley Comets of the fledgling North American Hockey League. He offers a lengthy and rollicking recollection of the trials and tribulations running a team, introducing some interesting situations and characters. It's a great read.


Of course Conacher was there first hand to also comment on pro hockey in the 1970s, including the creation of the World Hockey Association, NHL expansion and the resulting dilution of the player pool and the increasing violence and goon tactics.


Conacher was even an extra for hockey's greatest movie, Slap Shot starring Paul Newman. Conacher offers some interesting insight on the inspiration for some of the scenes.

Conacher's travels aren't done yet. He would become a rink manager in Edmonton, Hamilton and Toronto, where he comments on Gretzky's young Oilers, Hamilton's bid for a NHL franchise, and, in what may the most intriguing aspect of the book to many, the fabled Maple Leaf Gardens.


Conacher's insight into the Maple Leaf organization allows him to comment on and criticize his former team's lack of success since 1967.

Brian Conacher's book is an easy read, never getting too deep or critical. He had many unique vantage points, almost too many for a great book. But through his observations and insight he has written a better than average hockey autobiography. You will especially agree if you share an interest in international hockey, 1970s hockey or the Toronto Maple Leafs.


The one thing Conacher's book lacks, and it is a common failing of hockey autobiographies, is he never allows us to see him up close and personal outside of the realm of hockey. Maybe the book is long enough already at nearly 300 pages, but he is clearly a unique individual, never staying in the same place for too long and unafraid to try new challenges. His hockey career is unconventional as it is fascinating. I just wish we could learn more about the man that allowed himself to be so bold and brave, as well as hear some of the great stories of his life outside of his vocation.

For a fringe player who most fans from the past couple of generations know next to nothing about, this book really impresses the reader early that Brian Conacher is a unique person with lots to offer, especially in the realm of hockey. The kind of person who we want to get to know.



Did you know? This is Brian Conacher's second book. His first book was published 27 years earlier. He penned Hockey In Canada: The Way It Is. Conacher wanted to honor Father Bauer and the Canadians national team of the 1960s, rightfully feeling the underappreciated Nats were an important part of hockey history. The book actually angered the NHL because they did not like his criticisms of the pro game. This book helped to black list Conacher. Conacher says the NHL even tried to have him removed from broadcasting the 1972 Summit Series.

July 4, 2008

2008 Hockey Book Preview: Don Cherry's Hockey Stories And Stuff

The book: Don Cherry's Hockey Stories and Stuff, Hardcover, 288 pages
The Author: Don Cherry with Al Strachan
The Publisher: Double Day Canada
Release Date: October 28, 2008
Pre-order: Amazon - Chapters

Book Description
He has been named an NHL “Coach of the Year” with a winning percentage of over .600 and an AHL “Coach of the Year.” His comments on Coach’s Corner routinely make headlines; they entertain, educate, and often enrage. For all his controversy no one can deny the popularity he enjoys, popularity that was reflected in his top 10 ranking in the competition for “The Greatest Canadian.”

Quite simply he is a Canadian icon, and you can imagine the stories he has to tell.

About The Author
Don Cherry needs no introduction. So here's what he has to say about his first book in 25 years:

I’d like this book to be just like we’re sittin’ down tellin’ stories in my own language. I know I’ll be criticized because for some reason people are not too thrilled with the way I speak.

In fact, CBC wanted to fire me my first month on Hockey Night in Canada. The brass told my boss, Ralph Mellanby, “This guy is awful. Get him off the air. We owe it to the English-speaking children of Canada.”

I stayed because Ralph, who had just won an Emmy or somethin’ for the Olympics, said, “If he goes, I go.”

But Ralph stayed and said, “I have to admit, Canada is a land of two official languages and Cherry speaks neither.” It kinda hurt my feelings.

So don’t blame Random House or Al Strachan for the way the book is presented, I wanted the book to be like a couple of guys sittin’ down with a few pops tellin’ hockey stories.

I hope you enjoy it.

Joe's Note
While I don't know exactly what to expect with this title, I can guarantee this book will be a top seller this fall. And don't be so quick to dismiss Cherry as a literary giant. His 1983 autobiography Grapes: A vintage view of hockey was a great read.

July 2, 2008

New Publishers Lined Up For 2008

Hockey Book Reviews.com is gearing up for incredible growth in just it's second season of existence.

I have just successfully negotiated the inclusion of three more publishers to work with:

Wiley Canada - featuring the upcoming title The Road To Hockeytown

Heritage House - featuring the upcoming title Ice Warriors

Lorimer - featuring Hamilton's Hockey Tigers


Other books to be reviewed by these publishers this summer include:

Wiley
- As the Puck Turns: A Personal Journey Through the World of Hockey by Brian Conacher

- Between the Lines: Not-So-Tall Tales From Ray "Scampy" Scapinello's Four Decades in the NHL by Ray Scapinello

- Brodeur: Beyond the Creaseby Martin Brodeur with Damien Cox

Lorimer

- Long Shot: How the Winnipeg Falcons won the first Olympic hockey gold by Eric Zweig

- Star Power: The Legend and Lore of Cyclone Taylor by Eric Zweig

- Pink Power: The First Women's Hockey World Champions by Lorna Schultz Nicholson

These three publishers join 6 other major publishing houses as partners with Hockey Book Reviews.com. These publishers are Random House, Key Porter, Raincoast, Scholastic Canada, and the Douglas & McIntyre Publishing group, which includes HB Fenn and Greystone Books.

I will continue to look to secure more publishing relationships over the course of the summer!

June 29, 2008

2008 Hockey Book Preview: Ice Warriors

The book: Ice Warriors, Paperback, 240 pages
The Author: Jon C. Stott
The Publisher: Heritage House
Release Date: October, 2008
Pre-order: Amazon - Chapters

Book Description
Ice Warriors tells the story of the Western Hockey League (known as the Pacific Coast Hockey League before 1952), a determined, ambitious league that at its height aspired to establish itself as a second major league, a western counterpart to the eastern NHL.

Between 1948 and 1974, more than 2,500 minor-league professional hockey players skated for the 23 teams that made up the Western Hockey League. A small percentage of these players went on to enjoy substantial careers in the National Hockey League; others were former NHLers who chose to end their pro careers in the minors. Most of them, however, were minor-league "lifers" who played many seasons in the WHL and other minor pro leagues.

Ice Warriors traces the league's origins, rise and fall. The author analyzes off-ice influences on the WHL's development and portrays the on-ice highlights of each season, including interviews with players, coaches and fans, and statistical records and pictures from the era. The league's aspirations ended with the expansion of the NHL, and after the 1973-74 season the WHL ceased operations. In its 26-year-run, however, it provided winter sports entertainment for countless appreciative hockey fans west of the Mississippi.

About The Author
Jon C. Stott is professor emeritus at the University of Alberta. In 1973 he wrote the Western Hockey League's official commemorative magazine, and he is the author of three books on minor-league sports, including Hockey Night in Dixie (2006). Stott spent many winter evenings from 1951 to 1963 watching WHL hockey games in Victoria and Vancouver

Joe's Note
The old WHL was a great hockey league full of great players. But history has forgotten all about them, aside from the odd reference to the old Vancouver Canucks. Fortunately professor Stott keeps the memories of the WHL alive. More likely than note Stott's book will introduce most of us to the WHL. I'm included in that group, making me very excited about this title.

2008 Hockey Book Preview: The Road To Hockeytown

The book: The Road to Hockeytown*, hardcover, 320 pages
The Author: Roger Lajoie, Jimmy Devellano
The Publisher: Wiley
Release Date: August 18, 2008
Pre-order: Amazon - Chapters

* The book is listed as The Road to Hockeytown: Jimmy Devellano's Forty Years in the NHL, but the publisher's own description hints that the final title will be From Cabbage Town To Hockeytown. We'll have to wait a bit longer on the final title, apparently.

Book Description
The architect of 13 championship teams, six of them Stanley Cup winners, Jimmy D. has left his indelible mark on the game of hockey everywhere he has gone, from Cabbagetown to Hockeytown USA. Born in the working-class Cabbagetown neighbourhood of 1940s Toronto, Devellano has risen to become one of the most respected and accomplished executives in hockey and in sports in general.

He never did play hockey, but has always had an excellent eye for talent. As a scout and assistant general manager with the New York Islanders, he helped build the team that won four Stanley Cups in the 1980s, three of which he was with the franchise for. He was the first person Mike and Marian Ilitch hired when they bought the ailing Detroit Red Wings in 1982 and Jimmy D. carefully choreographed the steady rise of the Wings from one of the NHL’s weakest teams into the powerful club that has reached the Stanley Cup finals four of the last ten years and lifted the coveted Cup in triumph three times. Now in his 25th season with Detroit and his 40th in the NHL, Jim Devellano continues to be a driving force behind Detroit’s success as well as a strong influence in the evolution and improvement of the game and the league itself.

From Cabbagetown to Hockeytown gives a rare glimpse inside the world of hockey from an unusual perspective—through the eyes of one of the game’s greatest executives. This is the candid, personal account of Jim Devellano’s life and his 40 incredible years in the game of hockey. He gives us an insider’s insight into the business and personalities of the game, sharing his stories of many of the characters he has encountered over the years—how he convinced the New York Islanders to hire Al Arbour as their coach, and then did the same thing in bringing Scotty Bowman to Detroit; how he was one of the first to assemble a strong European scouting staff; and how he wheeled and dealed to bring a crop of talented Russians like Sergei Fedorov, Slava Kozlov, and Vladimir Konstantinov from behind the Iron Curtain to the NHL. As a general manager or head of hockey operations, Devellano offers a behind-the-scenes look at what the players and coaches are really like; how they are assessed, hired, and fired; how decisions are made on draft day; and how deals and trades really get done. As told to veteran journalist and broadcaster Roger Lajoie, From Cabbagetown to Hockeytown is a captivating memoir of a truly unique life in hockey.

Joe's Note: You'd never know it by looking at him, but Jimmy Devellano is one of hockey's brightest minds. Hopefully this book can escape the typical dryness that plagues these type of autobiographies. No picture yet folks, when I find one I'll let you know!

2008 Hockey Book Preview: Honoured Canadiens

The book: Honoured Canadiens, hardcover, 256 pages
The Author: Andrew Podnieks
The Publisher: HB Fenn
Release Date: October 1st, 2008
Pre-order: Amazon - Chapters

Book Description
The beginning of the 2008/2009 NHL season marks a significant date in hockey history, for it celebrates the centenary of one of the leagues most storied franchises the Montreal Canadiens.

Through their hundred years, the Montreal Canadiens have demonstrated their will to succeed by capturing more Stanley Cups than any other team in hockey history (24) . The Stanley Cup is the most recognized trophy in sport and the most coveted trophy in the hockey world. Montreal's ability to win as many times as their history shows would not have been possible without the contributions made by their many talented members and this book is dedicated to them.

The Montreal Canadiens have sent 62 Players and Builders on to the Hockey Hall of Fame. From coaching and managerial legends including Sam Pollock and Scotty Bowman to the extraordinary roster of players, the Habs have made enormous contributions to the games popularity and success during the teams hundred years of existence.
Honoured Canadiens profiles each and every one of the 62 inductees, providing riveting biographical information and spectacular photographs from the collections of the Hockey Hall of Fame itself. From early stars like Howie Morenz and Aurele Joliat to Original Six stars such as Maurice Rocket Richard and Jacques Plante, to modern legends including Guy Lafleur and Larry Robinson, Honoured Canadiens provides the complete roster of Canadiens greats in detail never before experienced.

Joe's Note
Another book churned out about the Montreal Canadiens great players. Being a big advocate of hockey history I fully support such an endeavor. I just hope Honoured Canadiens has something different to offer than Canadiens Legends: Montreal's Hockey Heroes or The Habs: An Oral History of the Montreal Canadiens, 1940-1980. The good news is author Andrew Podnieks is the man for the job.

2008 Hockey Book Preview: Reflections 2008


The book: Reflections 2008: The NHL Hockey Year in Photographs, Paperback, 160 pages
The Author: The National Hockey League
The Publisher: Douglas & McIntyre
Release Date: October 3rd, 2008
Pre-order: Amazon - Chapters

Book Description

Reflections 2008: The NHL Hockey Year in Photographs gathers together the highlights of a year’s worth of hockey memories, offering a spectacular pictorial chronicle of the 2007–08 NHL season.

With this photographic yearbook, fans will relive the season by poring over images of Sidney Crosby, Nicklas Lidstrom, Jarome Iginla, Vincent Lecavalier, Martin Brodeur, Roberto Luongo, Mats Sundin, and many other stars of the NHLl.

They’ll recall the great outdoor game where snow fell quietly as the “boys of winter” played before seventy thousand fans. From the first drop of the puck to the hoisting of the Stanley Cup, it’s all here.

The National Hockey League and the NHL Players’ Association are proud supporters of Hockey Fights Cancer, and a share of proceeds from the sale of this book will be donated to the cause.

About the Author
THE NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE AND THE NHL PLAYERS’ ASSOCIATION are proud supporters of Hockey Fights Cancer, and a share of proceeds from the sale of this book will be donated to the cause.

Joe's Note
I'm really excited about this title. Not because of the mind-blowing photography it undoubtedly will have. Not because of the great charitable movement being put forth here.

I'm excited because the NHL and the publishers are quoting little ol' me in their publicity campaign:

The second installment in an annual collection, with photographs that promise to be “nothing short of spectacular.” —Hockey Book Reviews.com

Yep, after one hockey season perhaps Hockey Book Reviews.com is on it's way to the top!