The Mavericks: English Football When Flair Wore Flares
Autor Rob Steenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 15 apr 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472974853
ISBN-10: 1472974859
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Sport
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472974859
Pagini: 288
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.18 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Sport
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Henry Winter of The Times has stated on Twitter how much he loved the book and Rick Broadbent, also of The Times, has named The Mavericks as one of his favourite sports books.
Notă biografică
Rob Steen is an award-winning author, sportswriter and freshly retired senior lecturer in journalism at the University of Brighton. He has written for the Guardian, Independent, Financial Times, Sunday Times and Mojo. He has written numerous books on sport and has been shortlisted twice for the prestigious William Hill Sports Book of the Year award.
Recenzii
Quite splendid... just delicious - and brilliantly researched.
A lovely read, the kind in which you constantly annoy people by reading the funny bits out loud
A great book
If you enjoyed The Damned United you will savour Rob Steen's The Mavericks, an evocative look at football when the game was enhanced by genuinely edgy entertainers rather than overpaid characterless robots.
The Mavericks is irresistible, artfully combining sports journalism with social history and sharp pop-culture references.
In an era of PR-bleaching and PC-niceties, The Mavericks is an oasis of flair, hair and devil-may-care attitude. Yet beneath Rob Steen also highlights with real poignancy the sometimes grim and earthy reality behind the curtain. This brilliant book remains essential reading for anyone who likes social history with a nice backheel.
An evocative work which is given its cutting edge by the author's success in uncovering the idiosyncrasies that set the fancy dans apart from each other as their mutual non-conformism.
Great to see The Mavericks back in print. Wonderful evocation of the early 70s, an era when players weren't afraid to express themselves - on the pitch or in the bar.
One of the conundrums of football in the Seventies, now perceived as a golden age by a certain generation, is why did England fail to qualify for the 1974 and 1978 World Cup when a decade before they had been world champions? One of the main reasons is that managers Ramsey then Revie shunned a group of hugely gifted 'Rock and Roll' players - Marsh, Currie, Bowles, Osgood, George, Hudson and Worthington. Rob Steen's book brilliantly gets under the skin of the era both on and off the pitch when the game was more about passion than pound notes.
An irreverent and unflinching look back at football in the Seventies
For that missing element in a decent football book, the confessional Rob Steen has this down to his customary fine writer's art with The Mavericks.
A lovely read, the kind in which you constantly annoy people by reading the funny bits out loud
A great book
If you enjoyed The Damned United you will savour Rob Steen's The Mavericks, an evocative look at football when the game was enhanced by genuinely edgy entertainers rather than overpaid characterless robots.
The Mavericks is irresistible, artfully combining sports journalism with social history and sharp pop-culture references.
In an era of PR-bleaching and PC-niceties, The Mavericks is an oasis of flair, hair and devil-may-care attitude. Yet beneath Rob Steen also highlights with real poignancy the sometimes grim and earthy reality behind the curtain. This brilliant book remains essential reading for anyone who likes social history with a nice backheel.
An evocative work which is given its cutting edge by the author's success in uncovering the idiosyncrasies that set the fancy dans apart from each other as their mutual non-conformism.
Great to see The Mavericks back in print. Wonderful evocation of the early 70s, an era when players weren't afraid to express themselves - on the pitch or in the bar.
One of the conundrums of football in the Seventies, now perceived as a golden age by a certain generation, is why did England fail to qualify for the 1974 and 1978 World Cup when a decade before they had been world champions? One of the main reasons is that managers Ramsey then Revie shunned a group of hugely gifted 'Rock and Roll' players - Marsh, Currie, Bowles, Osgood, George, Hudson and Worthington. Rob Steen's book brilliantly gets under the skin of the era both on and off the pitch when the game was more about passion than pound notes.
An irreverent and unflinching look back at football in the Seventies
For that missing element in a decent football book, the confessional Rob Steen has this down to his customary fine writer's art with The Mavericks.