Firstly, there is of course the ice skating that takes place on frozen river in Louise May Alcott's Little Women. This is an episode which Dugdale interprets as speed skating since Laurie and Jo are racing and leave Amy behind when she falls through the ice. Don't forget that ice skating also features in The Catcher in the Rye by J. D. Salinger, as Holden Caulfield agrees to take Sally to Radio City for a spot of skating.
Dugdale also identifies James Bond's potential Olympic prowess in On Her Majesty's Secret Service, as the spy executes slalom, biathlon and skeleton skilfully. The following cover demonstrates Bond's ability to ski and shoot a gun at the same time, which probably undermines the dangerous nature of the Olympic skiing events currently on show in Sochi.
Poetry, of course, has a fair share of winter sports as well. T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land features some bobsleigh action, as an Austrian countess recalls fun in the snow before the war: "... he took me out on a sled, / And I was frightened. He said, Marie,/ Marie, hold on tight. And down we/ went". Robert Burns' also explores the peculiar sport of curling in 'Tam Samson's Elegy'.
So, winter sports do have a legacy in literary history...who'd have thought it?
(A link to Dugdale's article can be found in the first paragraph).
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