book review - Most popular for 2012

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Me Owd Duck on ‘Nobody Ever Says Thank You’

LTLF 13 March @ 10:05 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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Clough biographies have tended to be personal recollections by journalists who knew or were used by the great man at the time like Duncan Hamilton or Tony Francis. Wilson is a reporter from Sunderland who now writes for the Guardian and this claims to be the first full biography of Clough from birth to death.

Diary of a Footballer

thetwounfortunates 19 January @ 06:24 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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Only a Game: The Diary of a Professional Footballer By Eamon Dunphy Published by Penguin (second edition) July 1998, £8.99, ISBN: 9780140102901 Left Foot in the Grave By Garry Nelson Published by CollinsWillow August 1998, available from 1p, ISBN: 9780002187749 [E]veryone wants to be a footballer. I still do, and I'm 37.

Book Review: The Manager

thetwounfortunates 02 February @ 04:00 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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Here, in the latest of our book reviews, Ben Summers takes a look at Barney Ronay's The Manager, a book which surely deserves more than its two current stars on Amazon. The Manager: The Absurd Ascent of the Most Important Man in Football By Barney Ronay Published by Sphere August 2010, £8.99, ISBN: 9780751542790 This book's incongruous appearance in Fabio Capello's 2010 World Cup luggage leant it a curious subplot that could easily have been incorporated into the book itself.

Book Review: Graduation

thetwounfortunates 08 February @ 04:09 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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Our latest book review comes from Tom Bodell, editor of Vital Watford. Tom can be followed on Twitter at @TBBodell and here casts his eye on the autobiography of Richard Lee, one time Hornet and now a Bee. Graduation: Life Lessons of a Professional Footballer By Richard Lee Published by Bennion Kearny August 2010, £9.

Book Review: Sport Italia

thetwounfortunates 11 February @ 05:47 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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Sport Italia by Simon Martin Published by I. B. Tauris August 2011, £22.50, ISBN: 9781845118204 If anyone had any doubt about sport's ability to warp society, Simon Martin's sumptuous Sport Italia will leave them without arguments. A nation, remember, only since 1861; Italy has survived its first one and a half centuries by following the path described in Benedict Anderson's influential book, Imagined Communities – and sport has played an integral part in that.

Book Review: The Very Best of Pitch Invasion

thetwounfortunates 15 February @ 09:09 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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The Very Best of Pitch Invasion edited by Tom Dunmore Published by Pitch Invasion Press December 2011, $5.99 ISBN: 978-0615546834 Recent weeks have seemed pivotal ones for the football blogosphere. Three prominent general blogs, Les Rosbifs, European Football Weekends and The Equaliser have all decided to call it a day while pioneering club websites Viva Rovers and Boy from Brazil have also stepped aside; the circumstances behind the latter events having been chronicled in these pages.

MeOwd on Larry Lloyd’s book

LTLF 23 February @ 08:47 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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Larry Lloyd's Hard Man: Hard Game is one of the best accounts of Forest's golden years that I have read. I think Lloyd benefits hugely from having a female ghost writer. At the risk of being sexist, it just allows one of the hardest men I have ever met to admit to all sorts of things that I am not sure he would if he'd have played it safe and used a male sports journalist to help him write the book [.

Book Review: The Smell of Football

thetwounfortunates 15 March @ 04:00 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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The Smell of Football by Mick 'Baz' Rathbone Published by Vision Sports Publishing July 2011, £12.99 ISBN: 978-1907637148 I have a regular correspondent who likes to talk football. A Liverpool die-hard, man of Shrewsbury, our exchanges normally concern the current wiles of his personal idol, Rafael Benitez, or his affection for his hometown 'Salop!

Book Review: The Far Corner

thetwounfortunates 21 March @ 04:00 AM EDT Blog Details : Related Items
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The Far Corner: A Mazy Dribble through North-East Football by Harry Pearson Published by Little, Brown and Company October 1994 ISBN: 978-0-316-91189-4 Harry Pearson is a Billy Bragg lookalike and Guardian journalist with the misfortune to have been born in a village near Middlesbrough called Great Ayrton, whose most well-known son is the explorer Captain James Cook.