I've read and enjoyed a lot of hockey books by Mr MacGregor, starting with his Screech Owls books as a young hockey player growing up, and getting into his nonfiction as an adolescent. As an adult, I read about The Last Season, his "magnum opus" fiction, Canadian novel... Well reviewed by critics, not widely released. I finally tracked down a copy and sat down to read it.
And wow, did it take a long time. What the hell was that? I wanted to quit this one so many times. I wondered a lot whether the critics read a different book than me. It's a jumble of different ideas, jumping forward and backward in the life of its protagonist, Felix Batterinski, starting with his life in rural Ontario, continuing to his time with the Broad Street Bullies in the 70s, and moving forward to his post NHL career in Finland. That sounds coherent as I write it but it's neither engaging nor interesting. The characters are forgettable and I had a really tough time finishing it.
Is it the "The Canadian Hockey Classic" described on the cover? God, no. It's trying too hard to be "Canadian literature" and suffers badly for it.