Any Hockey Fans out there?
Bretton
was our guest several weeks ago when we talked about his novel The
Last Hockey Player
and he shared the first two chapters of this intriguing story. As a
very kind gesture, he sent me a copy of the novel as a gift. When I
received it, I meant to glance at it and get back to it later but
became immediately captivated by the story. Not at all what I
expected. I thoroughly enjoyed the book. I’m happy to say he has
agreed to a 4Q Interview.
Please
go HERE to read Loney’s bio and the excerpt from his last visit.
4Q:
Please tell us how this went from a short story to a novel and what
inspired it.
BL:
As odd as it sounds, the seeds of this dystopian novel
of survival in a bleak, wintery Nova Scotia came to me in
2007, in the midst of a sunny winter vacation in Cuba with my wife
and friends. I awoke from a dream about playing hockey on a cold pond
some time in a bleak future. I quickly scribbled down a few lines and
it became the basis of a short story called Hockey Night in the
Canadas which has appeared in two Canadian literary magazines
over the years – subTerrain in British Columbia and Between
the Lines: A Journal of Hockey Literature, out of Saskatchewan.
People told me that there was
a full novel in that short story, including my very wise wife, Karen
Shewbridge. After half a dozen years, I too began to see the
possibilities. Three years later, after a great deal of help and
support from my wife and children, my writer’s circle and my
editor, I had a published novel.
In the end I think the
combination of imbibing a few too many Bucaneros beer in Cuba as well
as good friends and great music inspired the original story idea.
4Q:
Would it be safe to suggest you are a hockey fan?
BL:
I am a fan and played until, at age 50, I had to hang my skates up
due to a bad knee. I come from a hockey family. My father played
hockey and so did my two brothers. My youngest brother, Troy, played
for about a decade in the NHL and won two Stanley Cups with the
Pittsburgh Penguins in the Mario Lemieux days. These days I am at the
rink watching my grandson play, which is a blast.
4Q:
Please share a childhood memory or anecdote with us.
BL:
I remember walking home on Saturday
mornings from Tiny Mite hockey
practice. We had a cold rink and my feet would be frozen and start to
thaw out as I walked home with all my hockey gear on and my Dad’s
old canvas duffel bag swung over my shoulder.
The
roads were so slippery I could practically skate along them in my
rubber boots and the sun overhead was so bright that its rays
bouncing off the snow banks pierced my eyes. My feet hurt and my eyes
were sore, but I went back to practice, again and again, every
Saturday. I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.
4Q:
What can we expect in the future from Bretton Loney, the author?
BL:
Something totally different. My first book
Rebel With A Cause: The Doc Nikaido Story
was a traditional biography of a very untraditional doctor in my home
town in southern Alberta. Dr. Nikaido’s life was
forever changed by the resettlement of Japanese-Canadians during
World War Two.
My second book, The Last
Hockey Player, was a dystopian novel. My next book will be a
novel too. The only thing it will have in common with this book is
that it will be set in Nova Scotia. Hopefully, in three to five years
time my idea will have grown into a full novel.
For
you readers that missed Bretton’s first visit and the link above,
please go HERE to read the first two chapters of The
Last Hockey Player.
Thank
you once more Bretton for being our guest. All the best with your
writing.
Thank you also dear readers for visiting. Take a minute or two and leave a comment below.
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