A pretty unique book will be hitting the shelves in October. It’s a look at hockey’s history told through comics and illustrations.
I guess it's time to show an updated picture of my library. Yes, I have a problem. But not as big as habsfan18's problem.
You have a wonderful problem! And great shelving display. My biggest problem is I have so many oddball knickknacks that my library is hidden behind them out of necessity. And all mags, THN, media guides, and yearbooks are binned and stored in back closet lol.I guess it's time to show an updated picture of my library. Yes, I have a problem. But not as big as habsfan18's problem.
Jesus Christ. Amazing. My first two reactions are, "that's f***ing beautiful", and "thank goodness I don't collect periodicals or memorabilia".You have a wonderful problem! And great shelving display. My biggest problem is I have so many oddball knickknacks that my library is hidden behind them out of necessity. And all mags, THN, media guides, and yearbooks are binned and stored in back closet lol.
Here's some photos of organizing, storing and putting as many in my display cases as possible.
Thank you @Habsfan18! And I wasn't kidding when I said literally no wall space. People like us do have problems!!Incredible, @Boxscore!
Oh wow. Honestly @seventieslord I didn't even know something like that existed. It's a lone island here in Philly for the most part.Jesus Christ. Amazing. My first two reactions are, "that's f***ing beautiful", and "thank goodness I don't collect periodicals or memorabilia".
You have made a point of collecting a lot of books. And a lot of rarer ones too. I see Road To Olympus in hardcover there. Very, very impressive.
I have to say, it's an utter shame that a collection like yours is not documented and catalogued in the SIHR database. It's basically discogs for hockey books.
You can catalog what you have, see what others have that you don't, compare your collection to other members, find other books with topics you're after, etc. It's amazing. The database alone is worth the price of SIHR membership. I can't stress enough how much you'll love seeing your catalog in there.
Minnesota has more youth, high school, college and pro hockey players than anywhere in the United States. For all that pedigree, and despite fifty years in the NHL, it still waits for a Stanley Cup championship team. This is the improbable tale of when the self-professed State of Hockey came closest to that title with the Minnesota North Stars. Through most of the 1990-91 schedule, the team was among the worst in the NHL on the ice, and dead last at the turnstiles. But in February and March, the North Stars began to win a little more. Future Hall of Famer, Mike Modano, and a cast of characters ranging from better-than-average to journeymen played some of the best hockey of their lives behind a homegrown goalie who made everyone believe in fairy tales, for a while. This is the story of the team with the worst regular-season record in any of the major North American sports leagues to play for a championship. The second half of Mirage of Destiny relates the exhilaration, heartbreak, and the real lives of all those players, coaches and staff who came so close to being part of something historic thirty years ago.
Between December 28, 1975 and January 11, 1976, a groundbreaking hockey event took place: Super Series '76. Eight National Hockey League clubs each hosted a single exhibition game against one of two touring teams from the USSR: Central Red Army or Wings of the Soviet. Officially nothing was at stake, but serious hockey fans realized that a Cold War clash of political ideologies was occurring on North American ice surfaces. The top pro teams would finally meet the best "amateurs" from the Soviet Elite League. The reputations of the NHL and Soviet hockey were both on the line. Canadians already knew how strong the Soviets were, based on the eye-opening experiences of both countries' hockey stars in the 1972 and 1974 Summit Series. For many Americans, however, the talents of the exotic, Eastern Bloc visitors provided a stunning revelation.
This book outlines the history of the intense Canada-USSR hockey rivalry that preceded Super Series '76 and focuses on those eight captivating games in New York, Pittsburgh, Montreal, Buffalo, Boston, Chicago, Long Island and Philadelphia. Two of these contests are still widely discussed today for vastly different reasons. One may have been the greatest hockey game ever played.
Thanks for the heads up, preordered.Coming this fall, this will likely be of interest. Heads up though that it’s published by McFarland, so if you’re in Canada you can expect to pay pretty much double the price of a typical book..
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Tks, i preordered this one, should be an interesting book !- Legacy on Ice: Blake Geoffrion and the Fastest Game on Earth - by Sam Jefferies…October 31st, 2023
Did you know that was his copy when you bought it? It's a nice find either way, but especially if you weren't expecting that.I picked up a used copy of Percival's Handbook and it was a copy Jimmy Devellano gifted to Jeff Blashill.
Yes, I did. It's the only reason I added another copy to my collection.Did you know that was his copy when you bought it? It's a nice find either way, but especially if you weren't expecting that.
It's a great series. It ran from 1971-72 through 1986-87.I have the Complete Handbook of Pro Hockey from 1981. It's a captivating time capsule that provides detailed insight on each team, evaluating each of them on offense, defense and in between the pipes. It also includes miniature profiles on each player. The funniest team overview by far is for the Winnipeg Jets, and the authors obviously had a lot of fun while poking fun at them. Interestingly, while reading an overview of the Edmonton Oilers, I found that they considered Mark Messier to be a player with very little potential who was supposed to be a bodyguard for Wayne Gretzky. This surprised me as I never really thought of Messier as being a particularly proficient fighter, nor a player who fought very often.
Additional articles encapsulate the raging debate on whether or not helmets should be made mandatory and why (and I'll give you eight thousand guesses as to where Don Cherry stood on this issue), an overview of a talented young phenom named Wayne Gretzky and what may be in store in his future, and a goofy joke of an article which attempts to predict the outcome of every Stanley Cup Final over the next decade. According to the author, there should have been a team in Tokyo by 1990, and hockey was supposed to be played with lasers as opposed to sticks.
Highly recommended!