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Yes. It left me underwhelmed frankly. But then when it came out I was 20 and now Im double that I may revisit it at some point.
It's a great book.
He has written a string of really funny, well written books since despite your snobby dismissal.
They've very accessible. Sometimes I think of Hornby as the novelist equivalent of a tabloid newspaper. On re-read, Fever Pitch (and possibly High Fidelity) could be said to be the start of metrosexualism, or at least football becoming fashionable (or at least accessible) and therefore being part of the build-up to £4 pies and £30 tickets.
I was going to say something similar. To glibly summarise: 'Fever Pitch' was when the middle classes started thinking football was cool and not the sole preserve of white working class male racist thugs. Although I do remember having quite a good discussion with somebody once that the movement had already started and Hornby merely reflected it. I think the truth is between the two. Personally I blame "When Saturday Comes" (joke).They've very accessible. Sometimes I think of Hornby as the novelist equivalent of a tabloid newspaper. On re-read, Fever Pitch (and possibly High Fidelity) could be said to be the start of metrosexualism, or at least football becoming fashionable (or at least accessible) and therefore being part of the build-up to £4 pies and £30 tickets.
Great book, truly awful film.
Bollocks.
It's AN explanation. The film wasn't shit, it just wasn't a representation of the book, as the book, in truth, was fundamentally unfilmable. It's an adaptation of a slice of Hornby's book.
The book, however, lifted the football-writing genre out of fantasy and into a kind of intelligent, reasoned way of describing emotions (even if the subject matter was a bit nerdy - but then there's plenty on here like that).
There was an excellent stage adaptation starring Tom Watt. Saw it at the Connaught in Worthing back in the day.
It's more a book about growing up, than a football book. Arsenal is the background to his adolescence, but it could just as easily have been about trainspotting
I thought it an apt comparison - both about a destructive addiction (ruined weekends after a wet and cold February afternoon loosing to Huddersfield).No, that's a different film entirely