I finished Women on Ice: The Early Years of Women's Hockey in Western Canada by Wayne Norton (2009). It's a concise, concise look at the early history of women's hockey in Western Canada (Alberta and British Columbia), from roughly 1900 to 1940. Norton gives focus to teams in Vancouver, Victoria, Fernie, Edmonton, and Calgary, and shows how they were developed played each other, and ultimately all folded. Norton provides plenty of photos of the teams and players as well as highlights the sexist commentary that contemporary newspapers published about the teams, while showing that teams could become quite popular despite facing several obstacles.
It also serves as a bit of an introduction to early hockey, as he opens the books by contextualizing things and going over who the Patricks are and why they matter (Frank Patrick was evidently a booster of women's hockey: he sponsored the Vancouver team for several years, his wife "chaperoned" them as was required of the day, and in 1920-21 the PCHA hosted a few women's games in between regular season matches, though that did not repeat). Norton also makes clear some things that are a little jarring for a modern reader, things like the Fernie Swastikas, the terminology (hockeyists, for example), and again the rampant sexism (numerous mentions of the looks of the players, their marital status, and teams with names like "Kewpies", for some prominent ones)
As Norton notes at the end, he was hampered by a lack of sources, relying nearly exclusively on contemporary newspapers, which as anyone who's researched this era of hockey knows can be a daunting task at the best of times, but was even more so for the women's game. And with all the participants long gone, and it highly unlikely they left any written record, there was no way to incorporate any of their voices into the book.
That said, it's overall a good history of a topic that is not often covered, and done in good detail. Like he mentions, the history of Western Canadian hockey, like any history, was quite different than that in Central Canada (read: Ontario), and is deserving of it's own treatment.