Book description
The greatest hits from the world's largest-and most hilarious-hockey
humour blog
Hundreds of thousands of hockey fans around the world are addicted to
Down Goes Brown, and with good reason: Sean McIndoe is the funniest
writer in hockey. His often insightful, always entertaining posts have
made the site one of the top hockey blogs in the world-and definitely
the most amusing. From shrewd observations to tongue-in-cheek
commentary, Down Goes Brown manages to capture the essence of hockey
while exposing the frequently funny side of the sport. Now, in The
Best of Down Goes Brown, McIndoe himself compiles some of the
blog's best-loved posts, along with a host of all-new content, in one
side-splitting volume.
Packed with fan favourites, including The Code: Hockey's Unwritten
Rules Revealed, The official map of an NHL rink, A complete transcript
of every NHL game ever broadcast, What an official NHL trade call
really sounds like, An NHLer's guide to never saying anything
interesting, The other former NHL stars who interviewed for Colin
Campbell's job, and more, many of which have become so ubiquitous that
readers who have never even heard of Down Goes Brown know them by
heart, the book is the ultimate gift book for hockey fans everywhere.
- Brings together dozens of the funniest articles from the premier
hockey humour blog
- Includes the hugely popular viral hit, "The NHL's Top Secret
Flowchart For Handing Out Suspensions,” and many other legendary posts
- Features exclusive, never before seen content not available online
Sure to hit hockey fans right on the funny bone, The Best of Down
Goes Brown is the ultimate anthology of the very funniest
writing from the world's largest hockey humour blog.
Sean McIndoe is the funniest writer in hockey. A pioneering
blogger in the world of hockey humor, he grew Down Goes Brown
from nothing in 2008 to the world's biggest and best hockey humor
blog. Today, Down Goes Brown is one of the most popular hockey
blogs in the world. Sean is also published twice weekly by the
National Post, both in print and online. He posts regularly
on Grantland (one of North America's most-read sports
websites), and he is regularly quoted by, or a guest on, sports radio,
television, and your favorite blog or podcast.