Reviews
“Robinson draws parallels between his own troubled past and that of epic defenceman Doug Harvey… The result is a biography cum memoir that should find resonance with many Canadians… Robinson reaches a high level of sports biography… creating an exquisite patchwork of sports, personal narrative and manic alcoholism that is tragic in its normalcy.”- Janine Armin, The Globe and Mail
– The Globe and Mail
“Doug Harvey was one of a kind during his remarkable career, in that his brilliance on the ice was constant despite his battles off it. Chris Robinson captures both sides of this great defenceman with the accuracy of a Harvey slapshot.”– Red Fisher, Montreal Gazette
– Red Fisher
“Chris Robinson’s story storms and struts, zigzags to and fro like a sharp give-and-go. Stole This From a Hockey Card is a barbed and brutal knockout.”– Mark Anthony Jarman, author of Salvage King, Ya! and 19 Knives
– Mark Anthony Jarman
“…[T]he philosophical part of the book is what makes this book stand out. The narrator has lots to say about family and growing up, how parents do their best, impart their personalities but the kids eventually find their own way. This, in a hockey sense, reminds me of Canadian rocker Neil Young`s biography: Shakey. Jimmie McDonough has a good time picking away at ol Neil. And so Robinson does with Harvey.” – John Stiles, How Ya Doon?
– John Stiles, How Ya Doon?
“Using hockey–its history, its lore, its on-the-ice actuality–as a means of framing, structuring, ‘getting a handle on’ one’s own life is a brilliant caprice. But more than literary whim, in the hands of Chris Robinson this approach begets page after riveting page of hot-dang copy–and makes such perfect sense it feels inevitable. A doozy of a book!”– Richard Meltzer, author of Autumn Rhythm and A Whore Just Like the Rest
– Richard Meltzer
“Warning: This is not your average hockey book… The structure of the book is great, in that it effortlessly slides back and forth between Harvey and Robinson’s life. The author’s prose is punchy, and often profane, but jarring in its honesty… a great read for those interested in the nature of addiction, or who want to learn more about the life and tortured legacy of one of the greatest players to play the game.”-Jim Barber, Simcoe.com
– Jim Barber, Simcoe.com
“If good research means doing a lot of work, putting the fruits of research to work is an art. [In Stole This from a Hockey Card], Robinson proves himself not only adept at digging up facts and quotes, he’s wonderful at selecting real zingers… Besides revealing his own hang-ups with alcohol, Robinson lets us in on just how much Harvey put away, fooling even his fellow players with his capacity for booze… The parallel stories of death and redemption unfold as smoothly as ice behind a Zamboni.”– Heidi Greco, subTerrain
– subTerrain
“Puck lit (books about hockey) thrives in Canada, but a lot of hockey books are fluffy and overly nostalgic. Few bite with much honesty, and few are very critical of big-league hockey in particular. Bill Gaston’s Midnight Hockey and local lad Chris Robinson’s Stole This from a Hockey Card break from the tradition. Both are rock-solid books… Stole This from a Hockey Cardis part biography of Doug Harvey, part autobiography of Chris Robinson, part hockey critique, part dissection of human weaknesses, and partly an examination of how alcohol keeps us together while having the potential to shatter us completely. Balancing it and merging it all in one smart and snappy book is Robinson’s coup.”– Matthew Firth, Ottawa XPress
– Ottawa XPress
“A raw and unique approach to the sports biography.”– Kim Mannix Vermette, Metro Ottawa
– Metro Ottawa