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Ken Dryden: I grew up in what felt like the dawn of Canada鈥檚 golden age 鈥 then shadows began creeping in

In an excerpt from his new book, the former hockey star and federal cabinet minister recalls years when a future of better prospects and exciting new possibilities was almost taken for granted. A single fateful day symbolized how that changed.

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8 min read
xmas

The Drydens fetch a Christmas tree in 1964. From left, Murray, Ken, Judy, Sandra, Dave and Margaret.


In his new book 鈥淭he Class,鈥 bestselling author Ken Dryden looks at Canada鈥檚 coming of age through a unique lens 鈥 class 9G at Etobicoke Collegiate Institute (ECI). With few exceptions, this group of students (which included Dryden), stayed together throughout their high school years. Almost 60 years later, Ken Dryden searched them out and found almost all of them, to see how they are, what life has been like, what life feels like, after all these years. In this exclusive excerpt from the book, after experiencing the exciting possibilities of the immediate postwar years, for Dryden, his classmates, and especially their parents, by the mid-1950s, some doubts begin to set in.

As Canadians, we now had more than we鈥檇 ever had before. For most of history, most of humanity had only what kept them alive, and often just barely, and not for long. Then, in the early years in this past century, more of us, our grandparents and parents included, had a little more, and with that a chance to think about not only today, but about having even more in the future. Then the First World War came, then the Depression, and our parents could see how things might not always get better, but might get worse, and remain that way. Then the Second World War. But when it was over, better came. And better and better. Average people like them didn鈥檛 need to live in rundown neighbourhoods anymore. They could move to somewhere spacious and green, to live lives that might be excitingly, unimaginably different, and better still. These were our growing-up years.

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