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Home ice : reflections of a reluctant hockey mom / Angie Abdou.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Toronto, Ontario, Canada : ECW Press, [2018]Copyright date: ©2018Description: 233 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781770414457
  • 1770414452
Other title:
  • Reflections of a reluctant hockey mom
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Prologue: "Have fun! Try hard!" : reflections of a hockey mom -- Summer hockey camp : what's love gotta do with it? -- Graham James : where were the parents? -- "You can be anything!" or Life as a corny motivational sport poster -- Kids in the Colosseum -- Hockey-mom guilt -- Until hockey doth us part -- Home ice : hockey holiday! -- Bad hockey mom -- More bad hockey moms -- Are we there yet? -- Let's play -- Another season.
Summary: "The author of the Canada Reads-nominated The Bone Cage tackles the ups and downs of amateur hockey, from a mother's point of view. Over 570,000 people are registered in Hockey Canada and over 600,000 in Hockey USA. It's a national obsession. But what does that really mean when your child wants to play on a team? As a former varsity athlete and university instructor teaching sport literature, novelist Angie Abdou is no stranger to sport obsession, but she finds herself conflicted when faced with the reality of the struggles, joys, and strains of having a child in amateur hockey. In Home Ice, with equal parts humour and anguish, Abdou charts a full season of life as an Atom-level hockey mom, from summer hockey camp to the end-of-season tournament. Her revealing stories and careful research on issues such as cost, gender bias, concussion, and family pressures offer a compellingly honest and complex insider's view of parenting today's young athlete in a competitive and high-pressure culture."--Provided by publisher.
Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Main Library NonFiction 796.962 A135 Available 33111009271442
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The author of the Canada Reads-nominated The Bone Cage tackles the ups and downs of amateur hockey, from a mother's point of view Over 570,000 people are registered in Hockey Canada and over 600,000 in Hockey USA. It's a national obsession. But what does that really mean when your child wants to play on a team? As a former varsity athlete and university instructor teaching sport literature, novelist Angie Abdou is no stranger to sport obsession, but she finds herself conflicted when faced with the reality of the struggles, joys, and strains of having a child in amateur hockey. In Home Ice, with equal parts humour and anguish, Abdou charts a full season of life as an Atom-level hockey mom, from summer hockey camp to the end-of-season tournament. Her revealing stories and careful research on issues such as cost, gender bias, concussion, and family pressures offer a compellingly honest and complex insider's view of parenting today's young athlete in a competitive and high-pressure culture.

Prologue: "Have fun! Try hard!" : reflections of a hockey mom -- Summer hockey camp : what's love gotta do with it? -- Graham James : where were the parents? -- "You can be anything!" or Life as a corny motivational sport poster -- Kids in the Colosseum -- Hockey-mom guilt -- Until hockey doth us part -- Home ice : hockey holiday! -- Bad hockey mom -- More bad hockey moms -- Are we there yet? -- Let's play -- Another season.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 229-231).

"The author of the Canada Reads-nominated The Bone Cage tackles the ups and downs of amateur hockey, from a mother's point of view. Over 570,000 people are registered in Hockey Canada and over 600,000 in Hockey USA. It's a national obsession. But what does that really mean when your child wants to play on a team? As a former varsity athlete and university instructor teaching sport literature, novelist Angie Abdou is no stranger to sport obsession, but she finds herself conflicted when faced with the reality of the struggles, joys, and strains of having a child in amateur hockey. In Home Ice, with equal parts humour and anguish, Abdou charts a full season of life as an Atom-level hockey mom, from summer hockey camp to the end-of-season tournament. Her revealing stories and careful research on issues such as cost, gender bias, concussion, and family pressures offer a compellingly honest and complex insider's view of parenting today's young athlete in a competitive and high-pressure culture."--Provided by publisher.

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