"I put some details (in the book) that were kind of like my upbringing -- with a single mom, with her working two or three jobs, with being like a latchkey kid, if you will, with financial resources being limited," Mayers said.
"I could write an adult book about how I was able to make it, all the sacrifices and the struggles, moving as much as we did, not having money. But to me, that would feel like a sad story in a way," he said. "But I have so much to be thankful for and grateful for that, to me, it's a positive story. And what better way to write a positive story than to write a children's book?"
Mayers, a hockey analyst for NBC Sports Chicago and a
community liaison for the Blackhawks
, took the book idea to team officials, who embraced it.
Its message dovetails nicely with the Blackhawks' main hockey community outreach hockey programs that Mayers works with: Get Out And Learn (G.O.A.L.), which introduces school students to ball hockey in school gym classes; First Stride, which moves G.O.A.L. participants from ball hockey to learning to skate at the Blackhawks practice facility; and the Little Hawks, a Learn to Play program that provides equipment and for first-time participants between 5-9 years old and instruction from certified coaches at minimal cost.
"A lot of these programs start in fourth grade and we're kind of missing kindergarten through third grade," Mayers said. "Having a 5-year-old son at the time, I started thinking about how am I going to engage the younger kids that may be wondering, 'Why can't I try skating' or, 'When will I get to do that?' I wanted to give them the idea that hockey or skating can be for them. You can only become what you see. I don't think that was being represented as far as hockey players of color, so I decided to write my own (book)."