Black Boots and Football Pinks: 50 Lost Wonders of the Beautiful Game
Autor Daniel Grayen Limba Engleză Hardback – 3 oct 2018
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472958860
ISBN-10: 1472958861
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 120 x 180 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Sport
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472958861
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 120 x 180 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Sport
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
An ode to footballing years gone by. 50 small essays, colour pieces, charming memories of elements of football matches and paraphernalia, in Daniel's charming style. As Daniel says, these are 'unashamedly nostalgic'. Wistful and whimsical, these will 'prompt fond sighs of recognition'.
Notă biografică
Daniel Gray is the author of Saturday, 3pm: 50 Eternal Delights of Modern Football and Scribbles in the Margins: 50 Eternal Delights of Books. He has written five other books on football, politics, history and travel. His recent work has included screenwriting for the BBC, presenting social history on television and radio, and writing across a number of national titles.
Cuprins
1. Multiple cup replays2. Spontaneous atmosphere3. Proper division names4. Black boots5. Ramshackle dugouts6. Disorganised warm-ups7. Knowing the names of grounds8. Goalkeepers in trousers and hats9. Local shirt and hoarding sponsors10. Football Pinks11. Queuing for tickets 12. Big man/little man up front13. Player jobs after retirement14. Matches played in fog15. Shirt etiquette16. Kids playing in the street17. Checks, tartans and other turf patterns18. Small men marking the post19. Old-fashioned wingers20. Sharing the scores from elsewhere21. Ceefax and Teletext 22. Terrible goal kicks and foul throws23. Club season-highlight videos24. Abandoned matches25. Home away, home away26. Referee occupations and hometowns27. Players running onto the pitch28. Loan moves being rare29. Choosing who you're next to30. Main-stand clocks31. One-club men32. Beams and imperfect views33. Sponsored players' cars34. Homes with views into the ground35. Turnstile operators36. Shabby training grounds37. Characterful captains' armbands38. Provincial businessman owners39. Caretaker managers40. Paper tickets41. Player brawls42. Pixelated scoreboards43. Huts on stand roofs44. Regional highlights programmes45. Luxury, superfluous players46. Bald players47. Goal nets with personality48. The many scents of matchday49. Understated goal celebrations50. Heroes
Recenzii
A heartwarming, occasionally emotional and often very funny meander down Memory Lane. A book of considerable charm, worth the price of admission for the phrase "hair wax applied methodically and in a style that considered Charles Buchan's Football Weekly a mirror" alone.
A funny, affectionate and nostalgic celebration of quirks ... It would be easy to get the tone wrong but Gray's touch is exquisite. A book with so much warmth you could slip it into your pocket for games in winter.
The perfect stocking filler.a wonderful little book.
Often funny and absolutely authentic.
Fifty taken-for-granted gems of Britain's footballing past have been preserved for posterity.an unabashed love letter to the beautiful game. Back of the net.
[Gray's] poetic prose makes him the John Cheever of the penalty spot and the Joan Didion of the halfway line.
[Gray] effortlessly paints pictures that transport you to a place and time . both clever and endearing
[Daniel Gray] is a very fine writer . funny, warm and, sheesh, this lad can turn a phrase in the way Juninho would Samba his way past a defender for his beloved Boro.
Wistful and affecting.
Brilliant writing.
An affectionate, tongue-not-quite-in-cheek lamentation for all that's been lost from the game. Slight yet robust like a winger of the old school, this book jinks, charms and scores
A paean to football before the days of big money and soulless stadia.
A funny, affectionate and nostalgic celebration of quirks ... It would be easy to get the tone wrong but Gray's touch is exquisite. A book with so much warmth you could slip it into your pocket for games in winter.
The perfect stocking filler.a wonderful little book.
Often funny and absolutely authentic.
Fifty taken-for-granted gems of Britain's footballing past have been preserved for posterity.an unabashed love letter to the beautiful game. Back of the net.
[Gray's] poetic prose makes him the John Cheever of the penalty spot and the Joan Didion of the halfway line.
[Gray] effortlessly paints pictures that transport you to a place and time . both clever and endearing
[Daniel Gray] is a very fine writer . funny, warm and, sheesh, this lad can turn a phrase in the way Juninho would Samba his way past a defender for his beloved Boro.
Wistful and affecting.
Brilliant writing.
An affectionate, tongue-not-quite-in-cheek lamentation for all that's been lost from the game. Slight yet robust like a winger of the old school, this book jinks, charms and scores
A paean to football before the days of big money and soulless stadia.