Two books:

   Original 1892 hardcover copy of the Badminton Library series,

      "Skating, Figure Skating, with Contributions on Curling, Tobagganing, Ice Sailing and Bandy", by assorted authors.

       464pgs, wonderfully illustrated, a few samples shown.   Tobagganing section includes what looks like single Luge runners,

       and Bandy appears to be a one on one kind of hockey.  Oops, sorry bandytos, no offense.  From Wikipedia:

        

Bandy is a team winter sport played on ice, in which skaters use sticks to direct a ball into the opposing team's goal.[2] Based on the number of participating athletes, bandy is the world's second most popular winter sport. Only ice hockey is more popular.[3][4]

The sport is considered a form of hockey and has a common background with association football, ice hockey and field hockey. Like football, the game is normally played in halves of 45 minutes each, there are eleven players on each team, and the bandy field is about the same size as a football pitch. It is played on ice like ice hockey, but like field hockey, players use bowed sticks and a small ball." - Wikipedia

    Plus solo ice-sailing! 

Now there's a reason to fight global warming!

       Ice sailboats also, heck, all these sports that were originally played outdoors, all of this pre modern Olympic games.

       A clean copy, light tip wear, a hair off square, tightly bound, with front hinge just starting.

2. Figure Skating for Dummies, by Kristi Yamaguchi, 1992 Olympic Gold Medalist, clean copy, 1997, 347pgs for skaters and fans alike!