Recommend me a good Footy Biography!

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vulture

Banned
Jul 26, 2004
16,515
Barrel of Fun said:
It would be better if you read the text, Kestrel, rather than just looking at the pictures.


But I would have to have a brain to do that I am only a simple bird(bit like gina :jester: )
 






Starry

Captain Of The Crew
Oct 10, 2004
6,733
The Gentle Giant, John Charles is a good footballing read. It was edited and finished by someone else, Charles died before he got to finish it. Well worth reading though.
 




Wienergull

Geht in Ordnung
Jul 10, 2003
473
Berlin Mitte
Maybe not quite what you had in mind, but Tim Parks' A Season With Verona is a top read. Tells it brilliantly from a fan's perspective, and I was struck by the parallels to following the Albion. Although a play-off with Reggina to avoid relegation from Serie A hardly matches up to our plight at the end of the 96/97 season, the following passage describes the Hereford experience perfectly:

"... above all it's sport wound to a tension far beyond that which galvanises any cup final. Here we're fighting for the right to exist. It's fang-and-claw Darwinism. At the end there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth on one side, wild rejoicing on the other."
 




Hannibal smith

New member
Jul 7, 2003
2,216
Kenilworth
Horton's halftime iceberg said:
The Gary Imlach book mentioned is really good, really highlights the changes that have taken place in football, highly recommend.

One of the best sports books I have ever read. If only Ashley Cole had read that before he moaned about getting 55K a week, he might realise why everyone thinks he is such a twat.

Fowlers is a good read. Its highly prescient about Sven bearing in mind it was written before the last World Cup.

I would also highly recommend Once in a Lifetime about the rise and fall of the New York Cosmos. Everyone from Rodney Marsh to Franz Beckenbaur is in it and it could only happen in America.

Someone on this thread said Fergusons. I thought it was awful. I couldn't get past the tone of 'I'm great me and i'm from the university of hard knocks' Scottish Idiot.
 












empire

Well-known member
Dec 1, 2003
11,729
dreamland
if its a good one,they get read in a few days,unlike rooneys ,still reading that 5 months on
 








hans kraay fan club

The voice of reason.
Helpful Moderator
Mar 16, 2005
62,769
Chandlers Ford
My bestest football book is 'Dynamo' about the persecution of the Dynamo Kiev players [and the rest of the Ukrainian population] by the Nazis.

Those fellas had balls of steel, and took on the Germans in a couple of matches that made the big match at teh end of Escape to Victory look like a Sunday morning friendly.

Its an amazing book, that will inspire you, and possibly upset you quite a bit. Anyone who wants to borrow it is more than welcome, but they'll have to get it off Hiney first!
 




Muhammad - I’m hard - Bruce Lee

You can't change fighters
NSC Patron
Jul 25, 2005
10,911
on a pig farm
cloughies was good, as was venables and vinnie jones's
 


Arthur

Well-known member
Jul 8, 2003
8,762
Buxted Harbour
Wienergull said:
Maybe not quite what you had in mind, but Tim Parks' A Season With Verona is a top read. Tells it brilliantly from a fan's perspective, and I was struck by the parallels to following the Albion. Although a play-off with Reggina to avoid relegation from Serie A hardly matches up to our plight at the end of the 96/97 season, the following passage describes the Hereford experience perfectly:

"... above all it's sport wound to a tension far beyond that which galvanises any cup final. Here we're fighting for the right to exist. It's fang-and-claw Darwinism. At the end there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth on one side, wild rejoicing on the other."

On a similar theme The Miracle of Castel Di Sangro is well worth a read.

Also on even more of a tangent Playing the Moldovans at tennis is very good indeed (as are all of Tony Hawk's books)

Just finished Micky Quinn's and it wasn't bad. Interesting to hear his views on Keegan.
 










SussexSpur

New member
Jan 24, 2004
1,696
Finchley
Eamon Dunphy's diary, from the late Seventies, is quite fun and as catty as his TV commentary. Danny Blanchflower's autobiography is a little more sensible, but equally strident.

Oh, and the appendix of Alan Shearer's book is good.
 


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