New ebooks From Canadian Indies

Sports & Recreation

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Corner Kick

Corner Kick

by Bill Swan
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover Paperback
tagged : soccer, friendship
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Crack Coach

Crack Coach

by Steven Sandor
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : football, drugs, alcohol, substance abuse
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Cracked

Cracked

by Michele Martin Bossley
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Hardcover
tagged : mysteries & detective stories, winter sports, non-classifiable
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Excerpt

"Here they come!" Courtney learned eagerly against the railing. A blur of orange streaked past before I had a chance to see it clearly. The sled went into the turn. I watched it careering back and forth on the smooth curved ice of the track as it rocketed through the Kreisel.
"Aren't they supposed to keep the sled steady, Trevor?" asked Robyn.
"I think so," I answered. Courtney's attention was riveted to the orange sled that was fishtailing out of control.
"What's wrong?" Robyn said, just as a screech of tearing metal filled the air. Something silver had wernched loose and was lying on the ice. The sled flipped.
"Josh!" Courney screeched. The bobsled landed on its side and skidded toward the final turn, where it slowed to a grinding stop.

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Crossover

Crossover

by Jeff Rud
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : basketball, theater, non-classifiable
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Excerpt

I marched toward Stillman, who was at the far free-throw line, standing with the ball on his hip. "What exactly is your problem?" I said, looking directly into his black eyes.
"Just you," Stillman replied, an irritating smirk forming at one corner of his mouth. "I thought you were supposed to be a basketball player, not one of the funny boys of the drama department.

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Daredevil Club

Daredevil Club

by Pam Withers
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Hardcover Audiobook
tagged : peer pressure, extreme sports, non-classifiable
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Excerpt

One by one, we raised our flashlight beams to the underside of the roof. It was dark. But even in the dim light, we could see that the darkness was moving. It undulated like "the wave" at a hockey game. The cockroaches protested our entry by releasing their hold on the ceiling and flying down at us.

"I'm outta here," Caleb said, heading for the doorway.

"Not so fast," I said, my fingers closing tightly on his collar. "Pull your hood up, Caleb, and get on that ladder. I'll go last."

I hoped that last sentence didn't sound too bitter. I also hoped that all the weights I'd been pumping would help me haul my nonworking leg up. I gripped the ladder beneath my three buddies and hung my cane on one of the lower rungs.

My breathing was heavy, my hands were sweaty. But with one pull after another, I kept climbing.

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Dawn Patrol

Dawn Patrol

by Jeff Ross
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : mysteries & detective stories, water sports, non-classifiable
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Excerpt

The water was choppy. I struggled to hold on. If I bailed, I was done for. The coming wave would suck me in and spit me out the back after it had raked me across the reef. No one would be pulling me out of the waves here. There might not be a lot of me left to even pull out.

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Dead in the Water

Dead in the Water

by Robin Stevenson
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback
tagged : water sports, survival stories, non-classifiable
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Excerpt

The wind was a shrieking monster behind us and Jeopardy was barely in control, surfing down steep waves with an eerie roar as the water rushed under her hull. Every so often, a wave came at us beam on—sideways—rolling us dangerously to one side. I'd been out in all kinds of weather, but I'd never seen waves as steep as these. "It's nuts," I said flatly. I raised my voice so that she'd be able to hear me over the screaming wind and the crashing water. "And it's only going to get worse..."

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Deflection!

Deflection!

by Bill Swan
edition:eBook
also available: Paperback Paperback Hardcover
tagged : humorous stories, winter sports
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Excerpt

Chapter 1
The day my hockey team got some idea we weren't the worst team ever, Grandpa Gord drove me to the arena. Grandpa Gord is one of my three grandfathers.
We got to the rink at three-thirty, half an hour before game time. It was two weeks before Christmas.
My name is Jake Henry. My team is the Bear Claws. We play in the Oshawa Lakeridge League, which is made up of teams from Oshawa and Clarington. Since it's House League, we're not superstars or anything. Not like some teams you read about in certain books, who travel all over the country and solve murders between tournament games.
In the dressing room I put my stick in the rack. I dumped my equipment out on the floor and started to dress: pants, shin pads, socks. (I had put my jock on at home because there were girls in the dressing room.)
Just as I put my shoulder pads over my head I looked over at Victoria Eldridge, who was struggling with her sweater. Victoria and I take turns at playing goal for the Bear Claws. Victoria glanced over at me with this face she does sometimes that I can't describe.
"What on earth are you doing?" she said, loudly, separating the words the way adults sometimes do. Everybody in the dressing room turned to me.
I could have asked the same question.
"Where are your goal pads?" I asked.
"No, no, no," she said, shaking her head. "It's your turn to play goal, Jake."
Every game Victoria and I alternate playing goal and left defence. We share the goalie equipment, too, since it belongs to the team. Whoever is to play goal the next game is supposed to take the equipment home and bring it to the game.
"We got a problem here?" said Rajah Singh, our coach. Rajah is a good guy, about my dad's age, with short black hair, a dark complexion, and a moustache with streaks of white in it.
"Jake forgot the goalie stuff," said Victoria, pulling her sweater down and shaking out her hair. It was light brown and came to her shoulders. It frizzed out all over the place with static.
"It's her turn," I replied. "Isn't it, coach? I played last game…" Oops. That's when I remembered. I hadn't played last game. That game had been cancelled.
Coach Rajah looked at his watch. "We have twenty-one minutes," he said. "Where's your equipment?"
"At home," I said, trying to remember if I was right. If it was my turn to play, the equipment should have been home.
"Who's here who can get it?"
"Fred's out there," I said. Fred is my stepfather. My mother and father had divorced when I was about three, when I was too young to remember.
"And your Grandpa Cowbells!" said Simon Lee, referring to the odd clanking of bells we could hear even in the dressing room. Simon was a big kid who played defence. He had a space in his upper teeth where a tooth used to be.
Grandpa Gordor Grandpa Cowbellsis my mother's father. He comes to all my games and brings two cowbells that he rings every time our team scores. Sometimes he gets mixed up and rings the bells when the other team scores. He often does this because he knows squat about hockey. He also is teaching me how to play the violin. Or as he says, to play the fiddle, which he says is different than the violin.
"Go get Fred and see what he can do," said Coach Rajah.
I had just put on my hockey pants and had rolled one stocking over my right shin pad.
"Lemme…" I said.
"Now," said the coach. "Use some of your speed. We don't have all day." Rajah is easygoing, but when he speaks like that, everybody pays attention. And I mean everybody. Including all the parents who like to think they're needed in the dressing room. Yeah. Like a bad itch.
I jammed my foot into one boot, fumbled with the other before giving up. I limped out of the dressing room on one booted foot, shoulder pads crooked, and one shin pad flopping.
In the corridor between the dressing rooms and the boards of the rink, I looked up into the stands. There were another couple of teams on the ice finishing the third period of their game. Somebody hit the boards behind me and the glass rattled my helmet. Up in the stands, Fred was talking to some other parents and Grandpa Gord. I waved my arms until I got his attention. He came over and leaned over the railing.
My stepfather is average size with an average build. He has one blue eye and one brown eye. He teaches at a teachers' college. If you ask him, he'll tell you that he teaches the teachers to teach. If you encourage him at all he will recite a poem about a tutor who taught two kids to toot a flute. I try not to ask him.
"My goalie pads," I yelled. "They're at home."
"Thought you said it was Victoria's turn in net."
"It is, but she and the coach don't agree. The stuff should be there."
"You sure?" he said. "I don't remember seeing them."
"They've gotta be," I said. "Can you go get them? Please? Fast?"
Fred looked down at me with friendly eyes and burst into a slow-motion routine. He reached into his pocket and pulled out his cellphone.
"Good job your mother decided to stay home with N

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