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Rating:  Summary: Read this book if you want to start understanding Canada Review: "So what can a 10-year-old book on ice hockey really teach me about the sport and Canada?" I wondered as I started Home Game. The answer is pretty much everything. Dryden, who writes in a delightfully unhurried style, takes us through the game as it is played by enthusiastic amateurs, by teenagers desperate to break into the NHL and by the professionals themselves. And by probing how hockey took root here, Dryden provides the best analysis of what it means to be Canadian that I have ever read. My job in Ottawa is to explain Canada to the outside world and of all the tomes I have read so far, this must be the most illuminating. Rarely do you come across a book which so clearly explains what fires the soul of a country. Buy it now!
Rating:  Summary: Read this book if you want to start understanding Canada Review: "So what can a 10-year-old book on ice hockey really teach me about the sport and Canada?" I wondered as I started Home Game. The answer is pretty much everything. Dryden, who writes in a delightfully unhurried style, takes us through the game as it is played by enthusiastic amateurs, by teenagers desperate to break into the NHL and by the professionals themselves. And by probing how hockey took root here, Dryden provides the best analysis of what it means to be Canadian that I have ever read. My job in Ottawa is to explain Canada to the outside world and of all the tomes I have read so far, this must be the most illuminating. Rarely do you come across a book which so clearly explains what fires the soul of a country. Buy it now!
Rating:  Summary: An amazingly apt portrait to a homesick Canadian... Review: Although the title causes Americans of my acquaintance to laugh, this book really does a wonderful job of examining (if not always explaining) what the game of hockey means to Canadians. If you have read "The Game" and thought there was nothing more to be said about hockey and Canada, think again. Especial highlights are the early sections discussing small-town Saskatchewan and the importance of the rink in drawing the community together; the stories of particular players with NHL dreams; and the memories of members of Team Canada during the 1972 Summit Series. Phil Esposito, the heart of that team, is not surprisingly the guy with the best stories about what it all meant. The following section about Soviet hockey, which elevates the faceless Russkies into real guys and fellow players, is almost enough to make a Canadian root for them. (Almost.) And the writers' take on their own recreational play, and what it means to them, is illuminating and sort of touching. Once again, as in "The Game," Ken Dryden manages to depict himself as an amazingly inept Hall of Famer, always panicking under pressure and getting in the way of his defensemen -- "I could talk and chew gum at the same time, but breathing did me in." There's no false modesty here, the reader gets the impression that Dryden held himself to impossibly high standards. Still, when he explains that he now plays defense because he has fulfilled his goalie fantasies, and playing defense allows him to have new ones, it's nice to know he still enjoys the game. (And I have to admit, I howled when I got to his dry remark on playing defense and who's responsible when a goal is scored: "I've changed my mind -- it IS always the goalie's fault.") The photos that decorate this book are equally beautiful, from the prairie kids playing on a frozen slough to the professionals displaying their remarkable ability to a member of Team Canada (1972) jumping for joy as a Russian player offers a wry yet respectful salute. The photos are grouped according to section and I find it telling that the only photo of Dryden as a Montreal Canadien is one of him and a bunch of his teammates grinning in delight at having apparently won some kind of inter-squad scrimmage trophy. This photo is grouped with the recreational player section and tells an enormous amount about how Dryden felt about the game even as a professional. Dryden and MacGregor describe Canada as "an improbable country," and they mean that in a good way. What holds us together as a nation are the bonds we have made among ourselves, and hockey is one of those bonds. I was reminded of that this year during the Stanley Cup playoffs, when a mailing list I subscribed to for the CBC news reminded subscribers of schedule changes because "there's hockey tonight." I hadn't watched much hockey in years but somehow, living in Texas surrounded by US culture, it felt like home to watch Larry Robinson hoist the Cup once again. These are two great hockey writers, and they have produced a book that, even ten years later, is a joy.
Rating:  Summary: An amazingly apt portrait to a homesick Canadian... Review: Although the title causes Americans of my acquaintance to laugh, this book really does a wonderful job of examining (if not always explaining) what the game of hockey means to Canadians. If you have read "The Game" and thought there was nothing more to be said about hockey and Canada, think again. Especial highlights are the early sections discussing small-town Saskatchewan and the importance of the rink in drawing the community together; the stories of particular players with NHL dreams; and the memories of members of Team Canada during the 1972 Summit Series. Phil Esposito, the heart of that team, is not surprisingly the guy with the best stories about what it all meant. The following section about Soviet hockey, which elevates the faceless Russkies into real guys and fellow players, is almost enough to make a Canadian root for them. (Almost.) And the writers' take on their own recreational play, and what it means to them, is illuminating and sort of touching. Once again, as in "The Game," Ken Dryden manages to depict himself as an amazingly inept Hall of Famer, always panicking under pressure and getting in the way of his defensemen -- "I could talk and chew gum at the same time, but breathing did me in." There's no false modesty here, the reader gets the impression that Dryden held himself to impossibly high standards. Still, when he explains that he now plays defense because he has fulfilled his goalie fantasies, and playing defense allows him to have new ones, it's nice to know he still enjoys the game. (And I have to admit, I howled when I got to his dry remark on playing defense and who's responsible when a goal is scored: "I've changed my mind -- it IS always the goalie's fault.") The photos that decorate this book are equally beautiful, from the prairie kids playing on a frozen slough to the professionals displaying their remarkable ability to a member of Team Canada (1972) jumping for joy as a Russian player offers a wry yet respectful salute. The photos are grouped according to section and I find it telling that the only photo of Dryden as a Montreal Canadien is one of him and a bunch of his teammates grinning in delight at having apparently won some kind of inter-squad scrimmage trophy. This photo is grouped with the recreational player section and tells an enormous amount about how Dryden felt about the game even as a professional. Dryden and MacGregor describe Canada as "an improbable country," and they mean that in a good way. What holds us together as a nation are the bonds we have made among ourselves, and hockey is one of those bonds. I was reminded of that this year during the Stanley Cup playoffs, when a mailing list I subscribed to for the CBC news reminded subscribers of schedule changes because "there's hockey tonight." I hadn't watched much hockey in years but somehow, living in Texas surrounded by US culture, it felt like home to watch Larry Robinson hoist the Cup once again. These are two great hockey writers, and they have produced a book that, even ten years later, is a joy.
Rating:  Summary: a real hockey education Review: For those that dream of playing and knowing what hockey means to those involved in the game professionally, this is for you. Dryden starts off trying to demonstrate the importance of hockey to Canada. He shows just how much the game means to all kinds of people. The best section is when he focuses on one game between the Habs and the Oilers. He goes into great detail about what happens throughout the day leading up to the game, the lockerroom talks, and the game itself. As a Dallas Stars fan, I like seeing him focus on Bob Gainey, Guy Carbonneau, Craig Ludwig, and others. Dryden then tells the tales of what the series between Canada and the Soviet Union of 72 meant to both nations. You get great background on the Russian hockey program and how different it was. You get to read the book through the perspective of someone who has been there and someone who cherishes the game. It is very well written and should be on the shelf of every hockey fan.
Rating:  Summary: this book is great Review: I can see why Canadians love there game so much through this group of essays they are very interesting I wish americans loved hockey as much as the Canadians do then I wouldn't be the only hockey fan I know
Rating:  Summary: An engrossing intellectual exercise Review: Ken Dryden and Roy McGregor take the reader on a wonderful journey through the heart and soul of not only a game, but a nation. The book details all aspects of the game and how it affects individuals, families and even whole communities, from the sprawling Metropolotan areas of Eastern Canada to the frozen farmlands of Western Canada. The book can sometimes fall prey to over-intellecualizing the subject matter, but this treatment gives a multi-dimensional view of the game, as it has never been done before
Rating:  Summary: To understand Canada you must first understand hockey Review: Ken Dryden may best be known as one of the finest netminders in Canadiens history, but in this book he proves himself to be a very astute scholar as well. "Home Game" tries to explain how important hockey is to Canada and Canadians, but it can't. Nothing can. Hockey is so much a part of the Canadian identity that there can never be a sufficient explanation of it's importance. We Americans believe that baseball is our national pasttime, and that it is an integral part of our heritage and the growth of our country. But, compared to the role hockey has in the structure of Canada, baseball is merely a lame hobby that Americans play at now and again. This book, while about a sport, really delves into the soul of a country that has long been seen from outside as not having an identity -- except for cops in red jackets and funny hats, a couple of losers wearing touques and saying "take off, eh?", and big, dumb guys with bad french accents. It gives a glimpse of how the greatest game in the world really defines the collective culture and shared make-up of a nation. Every aspect of Canadian life, whether in major cities like Toronto or small communities like Medicine Hat, is infused by hockey, and similarly the nature of the game is shaped by places like Quebec City and Moosejaw. To say it is a must for any hockey fan is a gross understatement. The real strength of "Home Game" is how it can make the reader get at least a small understanding of the game, the players, and the country on a gut level.
Rating:  Summary: The soul of Canada exemplified Review: Ken Dryden's book simply strengthens the popular notion that he is not only one of the greatest goalies ever, he is the smartest man in the game, period. Even though this book is now ten years old, the political commentaries within seem fresh, as do the analysis of the intricasies of not only the actual game (a 1989 game between the Edmonton Oilers and the Montreal Canadiens is picked apart in breathtaking detail), to the day-to-day activities of a small hockey community, including a look into the life of a struggling NHL prospect (ex-NHLer Kevin Kaminski, late of the North Stars). Most impressive was the best look at the then-recent Wayne Gretzky trade I have seen (and I've seen a lot of them). This isa more than a look into hockey, it is a disection of the country whose identity has been moulded by this game. A must-read for serious hockey fans.
Rating:  Summary: Wonderful narrative on hockey and life in general in Canada. Review: There is a joke I know. It goes like this...
What's the difference between Canadians and Americans?
Canadians think there's a difference between Canadians and Americans.
As an American, I thought, tongue-in-cheek, that there wasn't really any difference between us and our neighbors to the north. Well, of course they have funny colored money, speak two languages, and say 'aboot' instead of about. But essentially we are the same.
Oh yeah, they have a strange fascination - obsession - with the sport of hockey. However, to know why hockey is so much at the heart of Canada and it's people is to appreciate that they aren't 'just like us'. That is the purpose of _Home Game_, by Ken Dryden and Roy MacGregor.
Dryden, a former goalie of the Montreal Canadiens and numerous Canadian National teams, along with MacGregor do this wonderfully. His broad sweep is both sociological and poetic, as he tries not to just explain, but also to convey, through his words, how much Canada relies on hockey to maintain it's identity. The stories range from a father using the hose on a cold winters day to create a young son's ice 'arena', to the mega-bucks dealings that would send National icon Wayne Gretzky to Los Angeles. It is a hockey book and more. A wonderfully emotional piece, Canada will never seem 'just like us' after reading this book.
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