Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Roller Derby Classics...and more!

Rate this book
Former professional Roller Derby skater, referee, photographer and fan, Jim Fitzpatrick spent years compiling a huge collection of memorabilia of the original Roller Derby along with some of the outlaw leagues which sprang up over the years. Now for the first time he gives a glimpse into the wild world of banked track mayhem with many rare and never before seen photos. A number of photos had been given to him by his friend and Roller Derby legend, Ann Calvello. Ann wrote the forward to the book. Also a number of soon to be classic photos taken by Jonathan Perry, famed Roller Derby photographer, are included along with a few the author had taken over the years.
Enjoy this look back on a sport which refuses to die. The original Roller Derby ended in 1973 but today still lives on in a number of variations, including the all-girl leagues which now number in the thirties.

217 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2005

17 people want to read

About the author

Jim Fitzpatrick

58 books4 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
0 (0%)
4 stars
1 (100%)
3 stars
0 (0%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Timothy.
Author 1 book10 followers
February 28, 2014
Magnificent. Akin to a roller derby museum in book form, this is is essentially 200 pages of photographs and some memorabilia from the author's personal collection, well captioned and chockfull of minor insights into roller derby from the post-Seltzer era just up to the time of RollerJam. If one is reading Keith Coppage's Roller Derby to RollerJam: The Authorized Story of an Unauthorized Sport, one might take a break right before his RollerJam chapters to soak in the wonder of Roller Derby Classics...And More!.

Not that this book isn't without flaws—flaws that would not have existed if Fitzpatrick had had the opportunity to work with a publishing house. "Unrefined" is a kind word to describe the production value; with poorly scanned, low-resolution images, cheap paper, and print-quality just a step up from photocopy. However, make no mistake, the overall effect is incredible. Filled—but not crowded—with photographs (some from Ann Calvelo's personal life, a lump from 1972-73, and then most from the author's skating career, roughly 1979 through the mid-1980's and beyond); even people unfamiliar with the sport will stare slack-jawed at the mayhem of historic banked-track roller derby. In addition to the standard on-the-track fare, there are also mind-blowing peeks at the strangest of roller derby ephemera: Rollergirls the 1978 tv sitcom, anyone? 1985's Roller Derby: The Musical? Mind. Blown.

Fitzpatrick's Introduction suffers from a curmudgeonly "the good ol' days were better" tone, and slides into a vomit of key details—sorely lacking dates or context—that is somewhat redeemed by the fact that no other published histories are talking about these things. Between the Intro and the book itself, we clearly see that roller derby didn't die completely and forever when Jerry Seltzer closed the doors on his family-owned operation in the early seventies. Roller derby's dark years were not so completely dormant after all. Missing from the commonly-repeated history of the sport, we see that Joan Weston and Ann Calvelo and Charlie O'Connell continued on exactly as before, and for a good many years after.

But, wait, what? What are these other things? International Roller Speedway? International Roller Skating League (and it's "opposition league in Los Angeles"), "six other attempts to revive the sport", 1993's Roller Game World Cup in Tokyo? The "original" Roller Jam vs. the "new" Roller Jam (perhaps that is just a typo)? Roller Bowler! Roller Superball! What were all these things!? When were all these things!? Fan Letters to the Queen of the Derby by Timothy Patten? Did that ebook ever actually exist?

So many Yeti in these woods.

The captions for the most part are excellent, and serve to educate the reader—along with the photos—better than some other books that try to introduce a history of the sport. But there are mysteries here as well: A 1985 "minor league team" opening for the Bombers? (Not to mention, what were the Bombers really in 1985?) Rollermatch? The Royal Rollers? Thankfully, though, Jim Fitzpatrick has called all these strange things out his book; and The Complete-and-Authoritative-History-Of-Roller-Derby-That-Is-Yet-To-Come, at least, will include all such fantastical creatures that were ultimately born of Leo Seltzer's original creation.

If I could rate this a 3.5 I would, but I am rounding up for the pure, rosy glow it gives me to sift through this fun collection of images culled by a man who might just love roller derby even more than I do. Despite its terrible cover, and rough presentation, this is a must-own for the derby enthusiast. One might dream that it might be reissued someday by an established house that can properly reproduce the images, and provide editorial and design input. But for now, this is worth seeking out and acquiring.
Displaying 1 of 1 review

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.