2020 Review
After kicking off our book feature in November 2019 with
The History of Professional Hockey in Victoria B.C. 1911-2011 by historian Helen Edwards, it was in the second half of 2020 that the presentations really got rolling. No fewer than 12 books were presented to our forum over the course of the year 2020 and a 13th will be added before the calender turns to 2021.
Several of the books presented are dedicated to a specific NHL franchise:
In the recent re-edition of
100 Things Maple Leafs Fan Should Know & Do Before They Die, Toronto hockey historian Paul Patskou (
@ClassicHockey) provides a treasure trove of Toronto Maple Leafs stories & histories.
Daniel Mahoney (
@Trotsnj) was a contributor to The Hockey News back in the 1980s. In his book
The Most Wonderful Times: Memories of New York Rangers Alumni he has published ten interviews with former Rangers greats conducted during that time (including Bill Cook and Fred Shero).
The curious history of a franchise that doesn't exist anymore, the California Golden Seals, is covered by Steve Currier (
@Steve Currier) in his 2017 book
The California Golden Seals: a Tale of White Skates and Red Ink, and One of the NHL’s Most Outlandish Teams.
An expansion franchise that has fared better, albeit not without hitting bumps in the road, is the subject that journalist Greg Enright (
@Greg Enright) has dedicated his book to:
The Pittsburgh Penguins – The First 25 Years. His write-up follows the Pittsburgh club through the good times and the bad times.
The next book keeps us in Pennsylvania but goes beyond the history of the local NHL franchise: Alan Bass (
@Alan Bass) has written about
Professional Hockey in Philadelphia from its origins 100+ years ago and took a look at the Flyers at well as the other professional clubs that Philadelphia has seen over the years.
Hockey writer Ty Dilello (
@nabby12) has already published about Manitoba hockey history before and the follow-up this year was his new book
Manitoba Hockey – An Oral History. No less than 27 different players from the Keystone State are featured (including Andy Bathgate and Brett Hull).
The next two books take us overseas to Great Britain. In the epic
Lion in Winter: A Complete Record of Great Britain at the Olympics, World and European Ice Hockey Championships, leading British hockey historian Martin Harris (
@Martin Harris) has covered exactly the massive ground that the book title outlines.
Stewart Roberts (
@Stewart), a renowned British hockey writer in his own right, has presented the book
Brighton Tigers: A Story of Sporting Passion about the history of this club from the south coast of England. Brighton's most memorable hours came in the 1950s when their club gave the up-and-coming Soviets something to handle.
Next we turn to a biographical work. In
Hitch, Hockey's Unsung Hero: The Story of Boston Bruin Lionel Hitchman, the player's own granddaughter Pam Coburn (
@Pam Coburn) provides a close-up of the stay-at-home defender Hitchman that also gives insights into the highly influential 1920s/1930s Boston Bruins.
From the 1930s to 1950s, Bee Hive Golden Corn Syrup ran a promotion of hockey photos that played an important role in the development of NHL fandom. The book presented by Aubrey Ferguson (
@aubferg),
The Golden Years: Bee Hive Golden Corn Syrup Hockey Picture Promotion 1934-68, contains the backstory and all 1025 photos that were issued.
Historian Andrew Holman (
@Andrew Holman) has collected a great variety of sources covering different topics and aspects pivotal to the development of the hockey in Canada. Initial distribution of his book
A Hotly Contested Affair: Hockey in Canada has been slow but by now the book should be widely available.
Last but not least, the book
The Fastest Game in the World: Hockey & the Globalization of Sports by Bruce Berglund (
@Bruce Berglund) provides a history of hockey as a global sport by using sources from a variety of different countries and languages and traces the development of the hockey world.
Thanks to all the authors named! It's great that so many have presented their publications here, provided reading extracts and additional insight into their work, answered questions and in some cases even offered discounts to our forum members. Additional thanks to Greg Oliver (
@goliver845) who keeps informing us about these and other book publications as he presents them in
his column on the SIHR website. Speaking of SIHR, a 2020 review wouldn't be complete without mentioning again that our Book Feature is presented in association with the
Society of International Hockey Research and that SIHR is directing authors towards us via announcements in their Bulletin and on their website. Let's hope the presentations keep coming in 2021! The prospects are good: the next two or three are already in the pipeline.