Steven Galloway's first novel, an incredible coming of age story, now
revised and available in trade paperback from Vintage Canada.
Finnie Walsh is a captivating, Irving-esque story of family,
friendship, redemption, and legend.
Paul Woodward lives in Portsmouth, a quiet northern mill-town. Born the
day Paul Henderson planted the puck between the pipes against the Soviet
Union to win the 1972 Super Series, Paul has no choice about playing
hockey. His best friend Finnie Walsh is stinking rich. He is also fellow
hockey fanatic and the only good kid in a long line of delinquent
brothers. Paul's father works the nightshift at the local mill, owned by
Finnie's father. One fateful day the boys noisily prepare for their
first season of hockey in the Woodward driveway, keeping Paul's father
awake when he should be sleeping. This triggers a chain of
world-altering events. Galloway proves that childhood innocence, while
not exactly bliss, can be amusing and more than mildly instructional.
This is the book John Irving would have written if he understood hockey
as well as wrestling. Finnie Walsh, like the fabled games before NHL
expansion, is a story about greatness and legend. But it's also a
heartsong to family, friendship, and atonement.