The role of hockey in Canada serves as a national identity, a unifying
force in a country of 33 million people. So crazed are Canadians for
their national sport that they ranked outrageous hockey commentator and
high school drop-out Don Cherry ahead of Alexander Graham Bell on a list
of the greatest Canadians in history. Penned by hockey star Paul
Henderson-famed scorer of Canada's Greatest Goal in the 1972 Summit
Series-and featuring a foreword by Prime Minister Stephen Harper, How
Hockey Explains Canada explores just how deeply engrained this national
pastime is in the Canadian psyche. The intelligent discourse on Canada's
national sport goes far beyond the sport's most-loved icons, great
plays, and notorious brawls by looking into the history and culture of
the game to explain why hockey has had such an enigmatic hold on
Canadians. Featuring interviews with more than 35 current and former NHL
players, coaches, executives, and commentators, this expansive biography
of the sport explores hockey's inextricable connection to everything
from the Confederation to the Cold War to international perception of
Canada and the country's own cultural divide.