Understanding Ken
A Novel
- Publisher
- Douglas & McIntyre
- Initial publish date
- Sep 1998
- Category
- Family Life
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781550542684
- Publish Date
- Sep 1998
- List Price
- $18.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
It is the story of a hockey-mad ten-year-old incapable of dealing with the recent, bitter separation of his parents. The target of his frustration becomes none other than hockey legend Ken Dryden -- greatest goaltender in the history of the world -- who, after three brilliant seasons, has suddenly and inexplicably abandoned the boy's favourite team. The novel is set in the interior of British Columbia, where our young hero escapes into a fantasy world of family reconciliation, Stanley Cup statistics and the building of a backyard rink which, night after night, stubbornly refuses to freeze. When he is living with his mother, moments of peace are squashed by the anti-hockey atmosphere and the menacing presence of her boyfriend. When the boy is with his father -- a yelling, hockey-obsessed doctor -- chaos reigns in the form of snowdrifts and sawdust, the result of an ill-timed mid-winter renovation of the front room. But at least the two share that one binding and all-consuming Canadian dream -- for the boy to play professional hockey in the NHL. The season progresses with a tumultuous mixture of exhilarating on-ice triumphs, humiliations at his father's public tirades, and desperate hopes that all will lead to the one great event that could make everything right.
About the author
Pete McCormack, a musician, fledgling scriptwriter and playwright, has a remarkable achievement in this first novel, which has been published in the United States and optioned for a film in Hollywood. An admirer of the CBC, a lover of public libraries, and chronically anxious about both, McCormack reminds us that no generation is homogeneous or speaks with only one voice.