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Best Canadian Sports Writing - Top Sports Articles & Stories for Athletes, Fans & Coaches | Perfect for Training, Motivation & Sports Enthusiasts
$14.21
$18.95
Safe 25%
Best Canadian Sports Writing - Top Sports Articles & Stories for Athletes, Fans & Coaches | Perfect for Training, Motivation & Sports Enthusiasts Best Canadian Sports Writing - Top Sports Articles & Stories for Athletes, Fans & Coaches | Perfect for Training, Motivation & Sports Enthusiasts
Best Canadian Sports Writing - Top Sports Articles & Stories for Athletes, Fans & Coaches | Perfect for Training, Motivation & Sports Enthusiasts
Best Canadian Sports Writing - Top Sports Articles & Stories for Athletes, Fans & Coaches | Perfect for Training, Motivation & Sports Enthusiasts
Best Canadian Sports Writing - Top Sports Articles & Stories for Athletes, Fans & Coaches | Perfect for Training, Motivation & Sports Enthusiasts
$14.21
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Description
38 pieces that will be remembered for seasons to come For 25 years, sports journalists south of the border have been collected in best-of anthologies. With Best Canadian Sports Writing, editors Stacey May Fowles and Pasha Malla offer a long overdue rejoinder from the North, showcasing top literary sports writing from diverse homegrown talent. This extraordinary anthology of recent writing mixes columns and long-form journalism, profiles and reportage, new voices and well-known favourites such as Stephen Brunt, Rachel Giese, Eric Koreen, Morgan Campbell, and Cathal Kelly. The assembled pieces offer polished prose, unusual perspectives, and rare insight, whether it's Shireen Ahmed taking on Kobe Bryant, Anshuman Iddamsetty aspiring for sumo size, or Eva Holland tracing the rise and fall of ski ballet. With its many voices and approaches, Best Canadian Sports Writing expands the genre into more democratic and conversational territory, celebrating the perspectives of both fans and experts alike. These remarkable pieces offer lasting insight that, like sport itself, excites, inspires, and never fails to reveal the truth about ourselves.
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Reviews
*****
Verified Buyer
5
"Best Canadian Sports Writing" comes across as something of an interesting experiment.Anthologies highlighting some of the best sports writing in America are often very interesting. Therefore, it's easy to be interested in how the format and approach might work in Canada.Apparently, a couple of people thought the same way. Stacey May Fowles and Pasha Malla have done a variety of articles and books over the years. The call went out for contributions, people responded with stories on all sorts of different subject, and - poof! - you've got yourself a book.The first question, then, is: does the book work? I have rather mixed feelings about that, and not just because I'm an American reading a book about Canadian sports. Living in a border city will knock down a few of the barriers that might exist in such a situation.The biggest difference might be that the American series relies quite a bit on some established sources for stories - Sports Illustrated and ESPN the Magazine, for starters, plus some big-city newspapers. That's not to say those sources have been come more diversified in recent years, because clearly they have - the on-line world is touching the entire world of journalism.There are some stories in Canada's version that were somewhat surprising to read. I should start with the good news; I liked some of the efforts.Dan Robson's story on a youth hockey team coming south from the area around Hudson Bay was very well done. I'm not sure I've read many fishing articles in my day, as I have no familiarity with the subject, but Cathal Kelly raised the subject in a way that was appealing and informative to this novice. John Lott's profile of the Toronto Blue Jays' batting practice pitcher was well done. Kristina Rutherford's profile of hockey player Harrison Browne was nicely written. Stephen Brunt's profile of the Blue Jays' Roberto Osuna was long but worthwhile.But there were some stories about odd subjects that just didn't draw me in. Two articles on professional wrestling might have been one too many. There are tales of sumo wrestling, street drag racing, ice climbing, and ski ballet. I try to avoid stories on the UFC when possible. The transcript of a discussion of sports journalists in color struck me as relevant, but the writing didn't require more than a stenographer. And some stories, such as the essay on why a video of the Sun's surface was sort of like the New York Knicks, could have been avoided.There were a few opinion pieces scattered along the way, and again some worked better than others. The article on how women's soccer has a chance to break through had me nodding in agreement at times, while a story on Kobe Bryant's appeal to Muslims got points for originality - although it might be a tough sell in most publications.In the meantime, few of the stories were particularly topical. I'm not sure if that was a deliberate decision, but it sure would have been nice to read something about someone in the mainstream."Best Canadian Sports Writing" might have some appeal to the adventurous reader out there. I'd like to think I can qualify for that category, but it's a little over the line for me some of the time.

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