Figure skating's ABCs
Kurt Browning's new cutting-edge book for kids
Source: |
Toronto Sun |
Date: |
February 24, 2006 |
Author: |
Sylvi Capelaci |
He kicked the triple toe-loop into overdrive and landed in the
Guinness Book of World Records. That was in 1988, when Canadian figure
skater Kurt Browning became the first to land a quadruple jump in
competition -- and his career was just getting warmed up.
Now the four-time Canadian and World champion, and three-time
Olympian has added another talent to his long list of accolades:
Author.
When Sleeping Bear Press approached him to write: A Is For Axel: An
Ice Skating Alphabet ($23.95), Browning jumped at the chance. "I had
so much to say about my sport," he says of this labour of love he
spent a year crafting.
Browning is as much a pop culture icon as sports celebrity. He's
gone from his Alberta-born and farm bred roots to the cover of Special
K cereal boxes and Smucker's jam labels. He's even been the answer to
a question on the TV quiz show, Jeopardy. Next to Wayne Gretzky,
Browning was voted by Canadians as the country's all-time greatest
athlete.
SHOWMANSHIP
But fast footwork, faster spins and big jumps aside, it's the Kid
from Caroline's charisma and superb showmanship that make him a
superstar in every young skater's eyes.
"While I was writing the book I was picturing kids that had seen
figure skating on TV and wanted to learn more about it."
Each page features a letter of the alphabet worked into a cute
four-line rhyme and is accompanied by a playful illustration by local
artist Melanie Rose.
The full-colour book dishes pint-size panache in both technical
merit and artistic impression. It works double-duty reinforcing a
child's ABCs and introducing aspiring upstarts to figure skating lingo
like, B is for Boot and C is for Coach. Additional sidebars on each
page provide details and fascinating facts about the sport.
* Who knew that figure skating debuted as an Olympic event at the
"summer" games in 1908?
Browning keeps the tone fun, factual and inspirational: "N is for
needs more practice" and "Never give up." He also touches on the
sports' sore spots like falling down.
"Learning a new jump can be frustrating but kicking the ice in
anger, as well as rude, is dangerous," he writes on the "K is for
Kick" page.
This was a hard lesson he learned. "Once I kicked the ice and then
a little girl fell in the hole. My coach took me over to her so I
could see her crying. I felt lower than dirt. I wanted to make sure
the book talked about fair play too."
There's irony in the fact that Browning's "A is for Axel" rhyme
describes how it is a big day in a skater's life when they land their
first one, but he doesn't remember his first. "What I do remember
though is landing my first double axel after six weeks of every day
falling on my bum."
He says some rhymes came easy to him, others, like the letter Q had
him stumped. He recalls sitting in a hotel lobby in St. Louis with pen
and paper in hand struggling to come up with a concept. Then along
came eight-time British National Champion Steven Cousins who asked
him, "What letter are you working on today?" When Browning said, Q,
Cousins piped: "Q is for quad, dude!"
The illustration on the quad page Rose says was inspired by
Browning. So was her depiction of a red-nosed skating clown.
BIG BLUE EYES
Except for Browning, Rose chose not to illustrate famous figure
skaters in the book. On the L is for Laces page the cutest little boy
with big blue eyes is sitting on the edge of an outdoor rink lacing up
his skates. "It's an older version of Kurt's 2 1/2-year-old son, Gabe,
" she notes.
Her oil painted illustrations strike a balance between eye-catching
and educational. The book's cover, for example, features three skaters
who complete a subtle depiction of someone doing an axel from its take
off position and flight to the landing. In the background junior
skaters are struggling to stand up. "The contast is to show the book
is suitable for toddlers to teens," she says.
It's a P is for Pity the only technical glitch in A Is For Axel, is
an incorrect spelling of the word official (offical) -- a 1.0
deduction in the new judging system, at best.
No deductions for Browning though, who now lives in T.O. with his
wife Sonia Rodriguez, a principal dancer with The National Ballet of
Canada and their son.
He predicts 2006 to be one of his busiest years yet, promoting the
new book, doing TV appearances (watch him on CBC for Olympic figure
skating coverage) and skating professionally in Stars On Ice and
Celebration On Ice.
Browning has already earned a place in Canada's Sports Hall of
Fame, but his biggest career highlight comes next month at the World
Figure Skating Championships in Calgary. Here he will be inducted into
the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame and join legends like Sonja
Hennie, Dick Button, Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean.
Calgary will bring Browning's career the full circle: "The ceremony
is taking place where I grew up in Alberta, where I landed my first
axel. It's all going to happen in my own back yard."
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