What's the best Fischler book you've read?
2000 books is crazy. Very impressive.
I checked my collection:Having recently surpassed 2,000 individual hockey books in my library, I decided to take a deep dive to find out just who are the “busiest” authors in the history of hockey book publishing. Just for kicks. I used the SIHR publication DB as well as my own personal records.
To keep it “fair” I decided against including annuals on the list..so no Zander Hollander and Jim Proudfoot, nor am I including the Official Guide and Record Books (Jim Hendy, Dan Diamond etc..) although in the case of Diamond his other works are fair game.
If an author is credited as a co-author on a particular book, I’m counting that as one of his works. They don’t have to be listed as the primary author. The reason I did this is because a lot of the official NHL publications had multiple authors listed and I would rather not complicate matters.
To make it clear, these numbers are those in my personal collection. It’s not meant to be an all-purpose listing of every single book each author has written, although I do own “most” in each case. I was just curious and figured I’d share it here.
Without further ado:
1. Stan Fischler - 109 books
Nobody comes close to touching The Maven. Sheer numbers wise, he’s easily hockey’s book “King.” Now, this number includes his late wife Shirley who worked with Stan on many of his projects. He told me himself that Shirley did the majority of the work on his 1974 book “Fischler’s Hockey Encyclopedia” for example, and when talking about Stan’s legendary career we absolutely cannot forget the huge role she played in it. I should also mention that it’s well known that Stan had many interns throughout the years, particularly throughout the 1990’s, that definitely helped him pump out such a large number of titles.
2. Brian McFarlane - 55 books
I’m a little bit surprised as I thought this number would be a bit higher. To be fair, I don’t own some of his books that were aimed at younger readers, and he rereleased a lot of the same material over the years under different titles that were expanded/updated editions of the previous works. I didn’t always feel it necessary to collect each one in those cases, although I did for quite a few of them.
2. Andrew Podnieks - 55 books
Surprisingly, he tied Brian McFarlane at 55 books exactly. Andrew has authored and co-authored many solid coffee table hardcovers, picture books, and Olympic books among other. His works are generally pretty accessible for every hockey fan.
3. Mike Leonetti - 37 books
His work was great, but the numbers are inflated a bit by including his children’s books. I can pretty much guarantee almost every single person in this group has a few of his books on their shelves.
4. Eric Zweig - 24 books
Eric does great work as an author & historian, and this number includes books in which he was credited as a co-author for. This number would be higher and would likely surpass Leonetti’s total if I had more of his younger readers stuff. I’m hoping this number will continue to grow!
5. Dan Diamond - 23 books
Even not including the Official NHL Guides and Record Books, Dan Diamond was a machine. He worked on many great official NHL projects throughout the years.
6. James Duplacey - 21 books
Ditto for James! These two played huge roles in the publication of many great titles in our collections.
7. Don Weekes - 18 books
Soon to be 19 with his upcoming book this fall (Picturing the Game), this number would be even higher if I owned every single one of his quiz books. I own most of them. He was the hockey quiz maestro throughout the 1990’s and early 2000’s. There were others of course, but none were as busy as Don Weekes.
8. Kevin Shea - 17 books
Kevin is fantastic. While I may “only” have 17 of his books (which is the vast majority of his published total) the quality of his works are top notch. I’m looking forward to this number growing.
9. Frank Orr & Scott Young - 14 books (tied)
Two legends who are surely to be on the shelves of the vast majority of hockey book readers/collectors.
10. Trent Frayne - 13 books
And the same could be said for Trent Frayne. I love his work. “When the Rangers Were Young,” in which he worked with Frank Boucher, is a personal favorite of mine.
I checked my collection:
Fischler 60
Podnieks 26
McFarlane 15
Shea 14
Diamond 13
Leonetti 12
Frayne 11
Young 10
Zweig 9
Duplacey 8
Morrison 7
there are a whole bunch with 6; I believe this is everyone with more than 6.
Good catch, I have 8 of Duff.Turns out I made an error in my original list. I had omitted Bob Duff accidentally. Must have mis-counted. I own 18 of his! Might want to check yours as well.
- 50 Greatest Red Wings
- Bruise Brothers
- China Wall
- First Season
- Salute to Lidstrom
- History of Hockeytown
- Hockey Dynasties (listed as co-author)
- Hockey Hall of Fame MVP (co-author)
- If these Walls Could Talk Wings
- Life in Hockey Pronovost
- Maple Leaf Moments
- NHL 100 Years in Pictures and Stories
- Lidstrom Pursuit of Perfection
- Salute to Howe
- History of the Windsor Spitfires
- Original Six Dynasties Red Wings
- Salute to Ted Lindsay
- Without Fear Greatest Goalies
Do you think that's enuff?Good catch, I have 8 of Duff.
Hockey used to be Canada’s game. What happened? A renowned sports expert details the sellout of a sport Canada once dominated to big-money U.S. corporatization and enumerates the effects, including declining amateur participation and audience size.
Hockey is still Canada’s most popular spectator sport. Yet, many fans question how organized hockey serves the country of its origin as they watch the NHL expand ever deeper into an indifferent American south, taking the best young Canadian talent and leaving major Canadian markets in Québec, the Maritimes and the Prairies in the cold. Minor hockey, once the pride of smaller communities, now serves as a brutal corporate feeder system for the NHL, treating underpaid teenagers like chattel, often shipping players as young as fourteen far away from their homes and families on short notice. Neil Longley contrasts the current state of the game with the way it was before the expansion era, when hockey teams were nurtured and supported at the community level, a system still practiced in much of Europe. In one of the most perceptive and authoritative analyses yet written on modern hockey history, Professor Longley finds no magic formula for putting heart and local pride back in Canada’s game, but makes a strong case for placing today’s corporate system “in a more realistic, less-Disneyfied, less sanitized, context.”
Another new book hitting the shelves next month:
Strange, I see a few sites claiming the publishing date will be in October 2023 and a few others that have April 2024.
I’ll try to get to the bottom of it, but as a guy who pre-orders almost every relevant hockey book that is published, one thing I can tell you for certain is that I take any publishing date listed with a grain of salt. As an example, I was supposed to receive a book earlier in the week but was sent an email advising me that the publishing date was pushed back a month. And that isn’t out of the ordinary. I’ve seen books have separate publishing dates for different formats as well..hardcover/paperback/ebook etc.
I did notice that the official Douglas & McIntyre website has an official publication date of 10/28, so I’d consider that to be the most accurate as of now anyways. Amazon has the same date.
@Habsfan18 (and to anyone else who might have a copy) - how did you find the set? As you said, it's the holy grail of hockey history up to 1967 - is its reputation justified? I'm considering buying the set, but trying to figure out if I can justify spending $1,000+ on three books.Guys, I just purchased The Trail Of The Stanley Cup - Volumes 1, 2, 3.
Not the leatherbound editions..and no dust jackets, but I’m ridiculously excited to get these. The holy grail of hockey history books.
Everything else on my to-read list has just been pushed to the side until all 3 volumes are read cover to cover.
@Habsfan18 (and to anyone else who might have a copy) - how did you find the set? As you said, it's the holy grail of hockey history up to 1967 - is its reputation justified? I'm considering buying the set, but trying to figure out if I can justify spending $1,000+ on three books.
If I remember correctly I purchased mine on abebooks. I believe it was a bookstore out of Edmonton. I paid $600 for the set.
They’ve always been considered the “Holy Grail” and I’ve always thought researchers and collectors could absolutely justify hunting them down and dropping a few hundred due to how rare they are. But with that being said, I’ll be honest to the fact that they’re not considered as useful anymore compared to even 10 years ago. The reason for this is due to archival sites such as newspapers.com. Everything you’ll find in the books can essentially be found while scouring the newspapers archives. Of course that IS what Charles Coleman did while writing the books. There are also some statistical inaccuracies but I suppose that isn’t a dealbreaker considering the correct stats can easily be found elsewhere.
If you’re just looking to add a sought after trio of books to your home library and have easy access to flip through and read the books whenever you wish, I’d say sure go ahead and buy them if it makes sense price wise. But if you’re interested solely in the information provided inside, I’d say just get a subscription to newspapers.com. It’s not cheap, but it’s cheaper than what the set will cost you.
I purchased my set on eBay a while back. Leather bound, pristine condition. Hefty sum... I believe about $1,200 for the set.@Habsfan18 (and to anyone else who might have a copy) - how did you find the set? As you said, it's the holy grail of hockey history up to 1967 - is its reputation justified? I'm considering buying the set, but trying to figure out if I can justify spending $1,000+ on three books.
If you guys have some free time, I was recently interviewed on “Hockey, Books & Storytellers” and would appreciate any support to their channel by giving it a watch and subscribing. They have an interview with James Duthie coming up, and I know there are some others in the works as well.
First time being interviewed on camera, so please excuse my nervousness when I mentioned that Frank Boucher played in the 40’s (well, I mean he DID play a handful of games!). I obviously know that he’s considered a 20’s and 30’s player so that was 100% a nervous brain fart lol
Thanks!