Out of Time: 1966 and the End of Old-Fashioned Britain: Wisden Sports Writing
Autor Peter Chapmanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 28 iun 2017
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472917171
ISBN-10: 1472917170
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.21 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Wisden
Seria Wisden Sports Writing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472917170
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.21 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Wisden
Seria Wisden Sports Writing
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Offers a similarly evocative (albeit less grim) and beautifully written portrait of London in the Sixties to Alan Johnson's hugely popular This Boy
Notă biografică
Peter Chapman was brought up in Islington, north London. In the 1960s, he played in goal for Leyton Orient junior and colts teams. He was a correspondent for the BBC and the Guardian in Central America and Mexico from 1981 to 1986. He covered two World Cups - Mexico 1986 and Italy 1990 - for ITV and is now an editor and writer at the Financial Times, where he plays five-a-side football. He lives in Norwood, in south London, where the stolen World Cup trophy was found in March 1966 by a local dog, Pickles, out for his evening walk.
Recenzii
It is a book to read avidly from cover to cover
Excellent
Very enjoyable
Out of Time describes with charm and self-deprecating humour the attractions of sexual fumbling, holidays abroad, the London music scene, Chinese food and much else. But this joyous book, a memoir of late adolescence laced with social and football history, is also a catalogue of both the untidiness and the limits of change, and a reminder that even in London opportunities were circumscribed and aspirations often throttled.
I loved it ... brings the year vividly alive
Out of Time is a gentle and affectionate portrait of the capital's gradual awakening to the charm of pop culture at that time.
The most enjoyable of these books
Chapman is as good on the background - a post-war childhood and adolescence, with bomb sites all around - as he is on the football.
An exuberantly brilliant memoir. There's a way we football fans have of clapping with our hands above our heads. There are many passages in Peter Chapman's book - even single sentences - that make me want to do just that in sheer admiration. For good measure, perhaps I'd throw in a cheer and an expletive of delight too.
Peter Chapman's exercise in nostalgia Out of Time reminds us of a year when for England, almost anything seemed possible, on and off the pitch, 1966
This evocative book interweaves Peter's personal memories with recollections of major events of the time and, of course, that World Cup triumph.
Excellent
Very enjoyable
Out of Time describes with charm and self-deprecating humour the attractions of sexual fumbling, holidays abroad, the London music scene, Chinese food and much else. But this joyous book, a memoir of late adolescence laced with social and football history, is also a catalogue of both the untidiness and the limits of change, and a reminder that even in London opportunities were circumscribed and aspirations often throttled.
I loved it ... brings the year vividly alive
Out of Time is a gentle and affectionate portrait of the capital's gradual awakening to the charm of pop culture at that time.
The most enjoyable of these books
Chapman is as good on the background - a post-war childhood and adolescence, with bomb sites all around - as he is on the football.
An exuberantly brilliant memoir. There's a way we football fans have of clapping with our hands above our heads. There are many passages in Peter Chapman's book - even single sentences - that make me want to do just that in sheer admiration. For good measure, perhaps I'd throw in a cheer and an expletive of delight too.
Peter Chapman's exercise in nostalgia Out of Time reminds us of a year when for England, almost anything seemed possible, on and off the pitch, 1966
This evocative book interweaves Peter's personal memories with recollections of major events of the time and, of course, that World Cup triumph.