Vegas Golden Knights is basically an fan-side view of the development and first season of the Vegas Golden Knight hockey team. It is thorough in its chronicle of the entire year, including summaries for each regular-season and postseason game. It is written by someone who has watched hockey for generations, and the added vignettes are a welcome addition to people who are unfamiliar with hockey; however, Pane seems to have an allergy to suspense, since his book gives away the outcome of almost every game at the beginning of each summary. This made the rest of the summary seem redundant and unnecessary. While the outcome was known at the outset, Pane made little effort to hide this from people (like myself) who did not watch any of the games throughout the year. In addition, there were two glaring mistakes: Reilly Smith played for Miami of Ohio, not Florida and near the end of the regular season a game was mislabeled as an away game instead of home. Those easy-to-see errors and the constant drama-squashing oversharing - in addition to the stream-of-consciousness feel - make this a good book for historians wanting a full chronicle of events in the game but not a person enthralled with the unpredictable nature of sport.