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Before the Lights Go Out: A Season Inside a Game on the Brink
Contributor(s): Fitz-Gerald, Sean (Author)
ISBN: 0771024215     ISBN-13: 9780771024214
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
OUR PRICE:   $19.80  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: October 2020
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Sports & Recreation | Hockey
- Sports & Recreation | Sociology Of Sports
- History | Social History
Physical Information: 0.9" H x 6" W x 8.9" (0.80 lbs) 304 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
A Globe and Mail Best Book
A finalist for the Rakuten Kobo Emerging Writer Prize

A love letter to a sport that's losing itself, from one of our best sports writers.

Hockey is approaching a state of crisis in Canada. It's become more expensive, more exclusive, and effectively off-limits to huge swaths of the potential sports-loving population. Youth registration numbers are stagnant; efforts to appeal to new Canadians are often grim at best; the game, increasingly, does not resemble the country of which it's for so long been an integral part.

As a lifelong hockey fan and father of a young mixed-race son falling headlong in love with the game, Sean Fitz-Gerald wanted to get to the roots of these issues. His entry point: a season with the Peterborough Petes, a storied OHL team far from its former glory in a once-emblematic Canadian city that is finding itself on the wrong side of the country's changing demographics. Fitz-Gerald profiles the players, coaches and front office staff, a mix of world-class talents with NHL aspirations and Peterborough natives happy with more modest dreams. Through their experiences, their widely varied motivations and expectations, we get a rich, colourful understanding of who ends up playing hockey in Canada and why.

Fitz-Gerald interweaves the action of the season with portraits of public figures who've shaped and been shaped by the game: authors who captured its spirit, politicians who exploited it, and broadcasters who try to embody and sell it. He finds his way into community meetings full of angry season ticket holders, as well as into sterile boardrooms full of the sport's institutional brain trust, unable to break away from the inertia of tradition and hopelessly at war with itself.

Before the Lights Go Out is a moving, funny, yet unsettling picture of a sport at a crossroads. Fitz-Gerald's warm but rigorous journalistic approach reads, in the end, like a letter to a troubled friend: it's not too late to save hockey in this country, but who has the will to do it?