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SOCCER BOOKS

Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Jimmy Greaves and Norman Giller. By Queen Anne Press. There are some available for $2.98.
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No comments about The Sixties Revisited.



Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Howard Wilkinson and David Walker. By Mainstream Publishing. There are some available for $10.22.
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No comments about Managing to Succeed.



Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Steve Claridge and Ian Ridley. By Trafalgar Square. The regular list price is $15.95. Sells new for $102.56. There are some available for $7.82.
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1 comments about Tales from the Boot Camps.
  1. It's such a nice and refreshing change to read a book on the subject of football(soccer to Americans and Canadians out there) that's not all to do with high-flying clubs, rich players and tycoons. This is about a 'real' footballer. Whereas most people are happy to read about the great lifestyle players like Beckham have, I'm much more interested in the nitty-gritty life of the footballer, the one that maybe reaches the Premiership(highest league) one day, but on the whole he starts at the bottom, works hard and toils in the lower divisions. These are the real heroes, the players that fans adore, no matter if they are supremely talented or not, these are the players who try and give everything for their club, and one of these such men is Steve Claridge.

    Written in conjunction with Observer writer, Ian Ridley,(the Observer is an English Sunday Newspaper)this book is a fascinating account of the unfashionable side of football life, the life that most viewers never get to hear about on TV or radio. Tales of long treks up the motorways to near deserted stadiums and of ungrateful managers, this maybe the unnoticed side of football, but it's the one that I prefer to notice! There are many funny accounts in this book, many containing the larger than life Barry Fry, it's well written and very honest.

    You have to buy this book, forget the biographies of Beckham, Owen, they are nothing compared to this incredibly funny, clever, eye-opening and downright brilliant book.



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Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Alan Green. By Headline Book Publishing. There are some available for $56.64.
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Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

By Victor Gollancz. There are some available for $1.98.
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5 comments about My Favourite Year: A Collection of New Football Writing.
  1. Being a football supporter myself I understand the stories put into this book. If you are a football fan read it because it is about us. There is alot of emotional, joyfull and sad scenes in this book and somehow they all revolve around football. Cracking book alex ross


  2. The subtitle (A Collection of New Football Writing) might lead some to thing this is a book of short stories like" A Book of Two Halves", but it isn't. What Hornby has assembled is a collection of 13 essays by writers (including himself) about their favorite season following a soccer team. Unfortunately, many of the essays are boring as hell to this American reader, with names of unknown players streaming by meaninglessly by and all manner of pop culture-specific references drifting past. Roddy Doyle's (The Woman Who Walked Into Doors) essay on Ireland's 1990 World Cup run is nice, as are Don Watson's piece on Leeds United '74/'75 and Giles Smith's piece on Chelsea '73/'74, both of which feature the authors as children. And of course Horbny's own piece on the futility of following Cambridge United in '83/'84 is entertaining as one might expect.


  3. Books about sports tend to be "subliterature". "My favourite year" would definitely be an exception to this rule - if it was a book about sports, or, more specifically, about football. But this collection of short stories is much more than that, utilizing events and facts related to football to describe human passion in its rawest and most exacerbated form. No matter the country, team or period, the stories reflect the kind of love (passionate, unilateral, unjustifiable, absurd, unconditional, etc.) that football fans all around the world know very well. Even with two or three less inspired stories, it is a highly enjoyable read throughout.Among many smiles and memories, it can even at moments bring tears to the eyes of the more emotional fans like myself.


  4. The greatest strength of this collection of essays/reminiscences is its diversity. In wonderfully varied pieces, "My Favourite Year" captures a broad band of moods and shows just how multi-faceted our reactions to soccer--and, at a deeper level, our approaches to remembering--are.

    For someone not acquainted with the world of (mostly) English football (there are inclusions here as well of Scottish, Welsh, and Irish teams), some of these essays may be a tough go. I'd be tempted to say that the best pieces here are the most widely accessible ones--that is, the ones that cater to a more general public--but that wouldn't be true. The elation of Roddy Doyle's opening salvo could capture anyone's attention, since it seems less about soccer than about infectiously good memories. But some of the most interesting and powerful glimpses here will be impenetrable to those with little knowledge of the inner workings of club politics in England; Ed Horton's amazing probing of the woeful and criminal mismanagement of Oxford United is both engaging and important, but I confess that some of its finer points were lost on this American reader, despite the fact that I know a fair amount about the background.

    So, unlike Hornby's "Fever Pitch," which manages to make itself about life-in-general masquerading as life-in-soccer, this collection might be a little harder to penetrate for the casual observer of the beautiful game. If you're a bigger fan of the sport, I highly recommend it, especially during the upcoming World Cup year 2002. "My Favourite Year" is a great hors-d'oeuvre for a month-long World Cup meal of soccer at its best.



  5. Unfortunately this is a mixed bag.

    As usual, most anthologies or collection of essays from a range of authors tend to have the `good', the `bad' and the `ugly'. It is no different with this collection.

    Ultimately, determining the good and the bad is dependent on personal choice. I found the majority of the essays to be rather dull, and uninspiring. Hornby's piece was probably typical.

    However there were three essays that made the experience pleasurable, as they described the highs and lows of the season, the love and hate of following a club and being a ardent club supporter, and the drama that overlays it all.

    The central premise of putting together a collection of authors to write about a season in the history of their club, and from the fans perspective, is to be applauded. But somehow, the expectation and the output never quite meet.



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Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Brian Woolnough. By Mainstream Publishing. There are some available for $10.22.
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No comments about Venables: The England Era.



Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Matthew Hall. By HarperCollins Publishers (Australia) Pty Ltd. Sells new for $113.21. There are some available for $29.69.
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Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Jim Smith and Mark Dawson. By Mainstream Publishing. There are some available for $35.36.
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Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by James Buckley. By Child's World. The regular list price is $25.64. Sells new for $20.18. There are some available for $14.73.
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Posted in Soccer (Saturday, October 11, 2008)

Written by Phil Vasili. By Frank Cass. The regular list price is $49.95. Sells new for $44.90. There are some available for $51.54.
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No comments about The First Black Footballer: Arthur Wharton 1865-1930: An Absence of Memory (Cass Series--Sport in the Global Society, 11.).



Page 74 of 98
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The Sixties Revisited
Managing to Succeed
Tales from the Boot Camps
The Green Line
My Favourite Year: A Collection of New Football Writing
Venables: The England Era
The Away Game
Bald Eagle
Soccer Superwomen (Girls Rock!)
The First Black Footballer: Arthur Wharton 1865-1930: An Absence of Memory (Cass Series--Sport in the Global Society, 11.)

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Last updated: Sat Oct 11 14:12:38 EDT 2008