Biography & Autobiography Personal Memoirs
The Stone Thrower
A Daughter's Lessons, a Father's Life
- Publisher
- Dundurn Press
- Initial publish date
- Aug 2012
- Category
- Personal Memoirs, Cultural Heritage, Sports
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Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781771022057
- Publish Date
- Aug 2012
- List Price
- $24.95
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CD-Audio
- ISBN
- 9781721365265
- Publish Date
- Nov 2018
- List Price
- $21.99
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9781771022620
- Publish Date
- Aug 2012
- List Price
- $7.99
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
A daughter discovers herself while uncovering her father’s legendary past in football.
At the age of thirty, Jael Ealey Richardson travelled with her father — former CFL quarterback Chuck Ealey — for the first time to a small town in southern Ohio for his fortieth high school reunion. Knowing very little about her father’s past, Richardson was searching for the story behind her father’s move from the projects of Portsmouth, Ohio to Canada’s professional football league in the early 1970s. At the railroad tracks where her father first learned to throw with stones, Jael begins an unexpected journey into her family’s past.
In this engaging father-daughter memoir, Richardson records some of her father’s never-before told stories: his relationship with his absentee father, memories of his high school and college football victories – including a winning record that remains unbroken to this day – and his up-and-down relationship with the woman he would one day marry.
As Richardson begins unravelling the story of her father’s life, she begins to compare her own childhood growing up in Canada, with her father’s US civil rights era upbringing. Along the way, she also discovers the real reason – despite his athletic accomplishments – her father was never drafted into the National Football League.
The Stone Thrower is a moving story about race and destiny written by a daughter looking for answers about her own black history. Using insightful interviews, archival records and her personal reflections, Richardson’s journey to learn about her father’s past leads her to her own important discoveries about herself, and what it really means to be black in Canada.
About the author
TESTJael Ealey Richardson grew up in the suburbs of Toronto, in a predominately white neighbourhood where writing took a backseat to athletics—that is until she stumbled upon a playwriting class at university. An excerpt of her work is published in T-Dot Griots: An Anthology of Toronto's Black Storytellers.
With an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Guelph, Richardson's writing continues to reflect the rumblings of her African-American ancestry. She currently lives in Brampton with her husband and son, and teaches literature and communications at Humber College.
Editorial Reviews
Jael Ealey Richardson has written a beautiful and compelling story about her wonderful father and what she discovered about herself as she learned about his remarkable past. Chuck Ealey was my childhood sports hero, and when I met him years later, I realized he was just as good a person as I had hoped he would be.… It’s a masterful father-daughter story.
Christine Brennan, USA Today sports columnist, author of Best Seat in the House
... a rare beast in the world of Canadian literature.
National Post
This is the story of recovered memories, of a child born to tolerance who must decipher her father’s unexplained and very different past and then endeavor to understand it. Jael Ealey Richardson makes her own terms and then struggles to meet them through a soul-searching, beautifully detailed journey, finding the truth of her father’s life along with her own.
Linda Spalding, author of The Purchase
... a remarkable read.
... a deeply personal and deeply passionate story.
ca.sports.yahoo.com/blogs
Elegant and moving, The Stone Thrower is not simply a book about football, or race, or fathers and daughters, although it is indeed all of those things. Richardson’s memoir is cinematic and triumphant, a book for anyone who has ever felt on the outside looking in and longed to understand why.
Tanis Rideout, author of Above All Things