Like many a Canadian kid, Stephen Smith was up on skates first thing as
a boy, out in the weather chasing a puck and the promise of an NHL
career. Back indoors after that didn't quite work out, he turned to the
bookshelf. That's where, without entirely meaning to, he ended up
reading all the hockey books. There was Crunch and Boom Boom,
Slashing! and High Stick; there was Max Bentley: Hockey's
Dipsy-Doodle Dandy, Blue Line Murder, and Nagano, a Czech hockey
opera. There was Blood on the Ice, Cracked Ice, Fire On Ice,
Power On Ice, Cowboy On Ice, and Steel On Ice.
In Puckstruck, Smith chronicles his wide-eyed and sometimes wincing
wander through hockey's literature, language, and culture, weighing its
excitement and unbridled joy against its costs and vexing brutality. In
exploring his own lifelong love of the game, hoping to surprise some
sense out of it, he sifts hockey's narratives in search of hockey's
heart, what it means and why it should distress us even as we celebrate
its glories. On a journey to discover what the game might have to say
about who we are as Canadians, he seeks to answer some of its essential
riddles.