The Premier League in Books – Part One

Arsenal

With such rich literary connections, Arsenal is a nice easy place to start. For historical accounts, try Patrick Barclay’s The Life and Times of Herbert Chapman, or Nick Hornby’s 90s classic Fever Pitch. If it’s modern player portraits you’re after, you’ll find few better than Tony Adams’ Addicted (with Ian Ridley), Dennis Bergkamp’s Stillness and Speed (with David Winner), and Lonely at the Top, Philippe Auclair’s biography of Thierry Henry. And if all that’s not enough, Amy Lawrence’s Invincible: Inside Arsenal’s Unbeaten 2003-2004 Season is undoubtedly one of 2014’s best Christmas gifts.

Invincible

Aston Villa

Despite being one of the Premier League’s perennial few, the Villains have made little contribution to the literary canon. In my humble opinion, that’s because the likes of Mark Draper, Julian Joachim and Alan Wright have so far steered clear of the confessional. A few, however, such as Gareth Southgate (Woody and Nord), Stan Collymore (Tackling My Demons) and Dwight Yorke (Born To Score), have been more communicative. Paul McGrath’s candid Back From The Brink is the pick of an average bunch. Perhaps Gabby Agbonlahor will one day right this wrong.

McGrath

Burnley

Same colours, same dearth of books. Thank goodness for Clarke Carlisle. His You Don’t Know Me, But… is an excellent, warts-and-all look at the realities of lower league football. Carlisle’s happiest and most successful years were at Turf Moor: ‘Owen [Coyle] came in and completely shifted the dynamic. His focus was on total enjoyment. It was fun at training, something a lot of the squad hadn’t encountered for a few years. This change led to a happy workforce, and a happy workforce is a productive one…We were definitely a classic example of a team whose total was greater than the sum of its parts.’

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Chelsea

It always surprises me how little of note has been written about the Russian revolution at Stamford Bridge. Until the arrival of beige autobiographies from John Terry and Frank Lampard, we’ll have to make do with the managers. Ruud Gullit: The Chelsea Diary and Mourinho on Football are entertaining reads, but Carlo Ancelotti: The Beautiful Games of an Ordinary Genius is the pick of the bunch. Although largely based around his time in Italy, the book ends with the brilliantly named chapter ‘Summoned by Abramovich’.

Ancelotti

Crystal Palace

Where the Eagles are concerned, Simon Jordan’s Be Careful What You Wish For soars head and shoulders above the rest. Mobile phone entrepreneur Jordan bought Palace in 2000 at the tender age of 36 and took them back to the Premier League. Ten years later, he was bankrupt and his club was in administration. This explosive and revelatory book will appeal to all football fans with an interest in what goes on behind the scenes, but it will mean the most to the long-suffering Selhurst Park faithful.

Jordan

Everton

This year has seen the publication of four books about Toffees heroes: Kevin Kilbane’s Killa, How Football Saved My Life by Alan Stubbs, Ossie by Leon Osman and best of all, In Search of Duncan Ferguson by Alan Pattullo. Here’s a juicy sample from the beginning: ‘Everton got under his skin. He would never ever forget how it felt to soar into the air, to head that first goal against Liverpool, before sinking to his knees with joy and relief in front of the Gwladys Street End; the legend before the player, the rise before the fall. On the same date 12 months later, he was languishing in jail.’

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Hull City

If a book could ever be said to sum up a football club, it would probably be Bend it like Bullard, nearly 300 pages of cult, no-frills entertainment. Here’s Jimmy on his motorway-side scrap with teammate Nicky Barmby: ‘I’d love to be able to say that I sorted him out, but the truth is that it was little more than explosive grappling for a few seconds. As the gaffer said later, it was hardly Ali-Frazier. We both ended up lying on a bush with no real leverage to get out of it.’

Bullard

Leicester City

The Foxes are back in the top flight again but it’s their 90s heyday under Martin O’Neill that provides the literary goldmine. Steve Claridge’s Tales From the Boot Camps is an underrated gem, while Savage! is as entertaining as you’d expect. Apparently, everything slotted into place when he joined Neil Lennon and Muzzy Izzet in the centre of the park: ‘With those two at my side, I produced my best forty-five minutes in a Leicester shirt…At the final whistle, everyone came over and hugged me. Martin had his arms around my shoulder. “Thank Robbie for getting us to the final”, he said to the others…That was the day I became Robbie Savage, Leicester City footballer. I was accepted by the lads from that moment on, and I still believe we were the best midfield that Leicester have ever had.’

Savage

Liverpool

As befits a club with such history, there’s a long list of options here. For the nostalgics, I’d recommend David Peace’s Shankly epic Red or Dead and Tony Evans’ I Don’t Know What It Is But I Love It: Liverpool’s Unforgettable 1983-84. But this Christmas, it’s all about the controversial ex-strikers: Craig Bellamy’s GoodFella (featuring the winning combo of John Arne Riise and a golfclub) and Luis Suarez: Crossing The Line. The Uruguayan’s story promises to be as explosive as his finishing.

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Manchester City

Unlike Chelsea, City have an excellent book on their recent rise: David Conn’s Richer Than God: Manchester City, Modern Football and Growing Up is a brilliant look at how the football times are a changing, for better or for worse. Beyond that, there’s Blue Moon by Mark Hodkinson about the 98-99 promotion season, and Paul Lake’s I’m Not Really Here, a powerful and cautionary tale which you really don’t need to be a Sky Blue to enjoy.

Conn

8 Autumn Titles to Look Out For

Now that the international fun is over, it’s time to return to the club game we all know and love. Here are 8 football books to read in the coming months:

1. A Season with the Honest Men by Gerry Ferrara (Pitch Publishing, 1st Aug)

I can think of no better preparation for the new club season than a Miracle of Castel di Sangro-esque story set in the glorious surroundings of the Scottish First Division. A life-long Ayr United fan, Ferrara takes us on an incredible, behind-the-scenes journey through scandals, pranks and tantrums as his team chase that all-important promotion. Great characters guaranteed.

2. Rock n Roll Soccer: The Short Life and Fast Times of the North American Soccer League by Ian Plenderleith (Icon Books, 4th Sept)

With the MLS now well-established and on the rise, it’s easy to forget that it was only founded in 1993. Before that, there was the North American Soccer League, home to teams called the Tampa Bay Rowdies and the Tulsa Roughnecks, and players called Pelé, Johann Cruyff and George Best. Rock ‘n’ Roll Soccer reveals in all its glory the colour and chaos of the world’s first truly international league’ – a must for all fans of cult sports stories.

3. Bobby Moore: The Man in Full by Matt Dickinson (Yellow Jersey Press, 11th Sept)

The only World-Cup winning England captain and a West Ham defensive legend – but what more do we really know about Sir Bobby Moore? Dickinson, The Times Chief Sports Correspondent, is a man well-placed to write this definitive biography. For the first time we get a ‘warts and all’ view of Bobby’s life both on and off the field.

4. Guardiola Confidential: The Inside Story of Pep Guardiola’s First Season at Bayern Munich by Martí Perarnau (BackPage Press, 2nd Oct)

From Andrea Pirlo to Graham Hunter, Glasgow-based publishers BackPage Press are building a great reputation and a brilliant football list. Their latest book, by Spanish football expert Martí Perarnau, looks at Guardiola’s high-profile return to management at Bayern Munich last season. If their other books are anything to go by, this will be packed full of excellent detail, analysis and insight.

5.#2Sides: My Autobiography by Rio Ferdinand (Blink Publishing, 2nd Oct)

This isn’t the first book that Rio has written but it looks likely to be the most outspoken and interesting. John Terry, Roy Hodgson and David Moyes will be just a few of the topics that the former Manchester United defender offers his opinion on. Plus if you needed any further persuasion, the brilliant David Winner is collaborating on the project.

Cover - #2sides Rio Ferdinand high res

6. The Second Half by Roy Keane and Roddy Doyle (Orion, 9th Oct)

What a fascinating prospect this is – one of football’s fieriest characters working alongside one of fiction’s funniest writers. According to the blurb, this book ‘blends anecdote and reflection in Roy Keane’s inimitable voice. The result is an unforgettable personal odyssey which fearlessly challenges the meaning of success.’ Something tells me Sir Alex won’t be the only person threatening legal action once this publishes.

7. My Autobiography by Luis Suarez (Headline, 9th Oct)

Fear not football fans – despite the Uruguayan’s big-money move to Barcelona, this explosive book will still be published this autumn. The Diving, the goals, the biting, the accolades, the racism – all will be covered in this candid account of the amazing highs and lows of Luis Suarez. ‘El Pistolero’ in his own words – not to be missed.

8. Ossie: My Autobiography by Leon Osman (Trinity Mirror Sports, 10th Oct)

From one side of Liverpool to the other, and from a man of controversy to a man of understatement. Now 33, Osman has played nearly 400 games for Everton and remains a pivotal figure in their ball-playing midfield. The first name on the team-sheet during David Moyes’ tenure, ‘Ossie’ also has 2 England caps and hopefully lots of stories to share with us.

Books for Brazil

The World Cup Reading list

Now that the domestic season is all but over, it’s time to focus our book attention on a certain international tournament that’s coming up. These 6 books have got all the bases covered.

The Host Nation
It’s always good to do your homework on the team with the home advantage – the players, the venues, the culture at large. Here it’s a toss-up between the new and the old – David Goldblatt’s Futebol Nation or Alex Bellos’ Futebol(Bloomsbury).  I’d favour the old here, especially as it’s been given a timely update.

The Host Continent
Brazil are far from the only side accustomed to a sub-continental summer. İGolazo! by Andreas Campomar (Quercus) gives you the lowdown on all of Latin America’s finest: the hosts but also Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Ecuador, Colombia and even Mexico, Costa Rica and Honduras.

The Favourites
Phil Scolari’s side may be round about 3-1 with most bookies, but this is hardly Brazil’s finest crop. Plus, there’s a history of failure interspersed with all that success. For a reminder, check out Shocking Brazil by Fernando Duarte (Birlinn).

The History
For the full facts, you can’t beat Brian Glanville’s Story of the World Cup but for something a little more fun I’d suggest Paul Hansford’s The World Cup (Hardie Grant). ‘Heroes, Hoodlums, High-kicks and Headbutts’ – the subtitle certainly has a lot to live up to.

The Personal Angle
On the subject of previous World Cups, I’d recommend From Bobby Moore to Thierry Henry by Liz Heade as a nice slice of familial nostalgia. But for 2014, it’s got to be The Boy in Brazil by Seth Burkett (Floodlit Dreams). At just 18, Burkett became the only English professional footballer in Brazilian football – this is his fascinating story.

And finally…The Expectation Suppressor
A month ago no-one gave England a chance in hell; but now that the squad has been announced, suddenly there’s a little bit of light at the end of the tunnel. Lest we forget our history of disappointment, read Pete Davies’ classic One Night in Turin. It may be nearly a quarter of a century since Italia 90, but it’s amazing how little has changed for our national team. For more, read my review here.

Recommended Summer Reading

Top 8 Paperback releases, May-Sept 14

1. Red or Dead by David Peace (Faber & Faber, 1st May)
Peace’s much-anticipated follow-up to The Damned United sees Bill Shankly’s Liverpool reign given the Brian Clough treatment. Expect tension, repetition, interior monologues, and profanities aplenty. At over 700 pages it’s no light read but Frank Cottrell Bryce has called the novel ‘a masterpiece’.

2. GoodFella: My Autobiography by Craig Bellamy with Oliver Holt (Trinity Sports Media, 2nd May)
With beach season approaching, May sees the release of a bumper crop of autobiographies. Keith Gillespie, Alan Stubbs, Kevin Kilbane and Clarke Carlisle all have interesting things to say but Craig Bellamy would be my pick of the bunch. The Welsh forward is a love-hate figure and his colourful career is sure to contain a fair few juicy anecdotes.

3. Stillness and Speed by Dennis Bergkamp with David Winner (Simon & Schuster, 8th May)
This highly original look at the Non-flying Dutchman’s career has already been longlisted for the Best Autobiography/Biography British Sports Book Award. Click here for my review.

4. The Manager: Inside the Mind of Football’s Leaders by Mike Carson (Bloomsbury, 8th May)
More Premier League bosses have been sacked this season (10) than in any previous campaign. In this thorough and insightful study, Carson speaks to 30 of the biggest names in football management including Jose Mourinho, Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger to find out what it takes to succeed.

5. Futebol: The Brazilian Way of Life by Alex Bellos (Bloomsbury, new ed 8th May)
There are plenty of books looking to cash in on World Cup fever this summer (most notably David Goldblatt’s Futebol Nation) but this updated classic is the one-stop shop for all matters Brazilian. The detail is astonishing, yet it’s also as entertaining as the players themselves.

6. The Numbers Game: Why Everything You Know About Football is Wrong by Chris Anderson and David Sally (Penguin, new ed 5th June)
It seems it’s not just books about Brazilian football that are getting a summer makeover. Inverting the Pyramid, Jonathan Wilson’s definitive history of tactics, has been brought up to date and this stats myth-buster has a bright new jacket and a World Cup chapter. Prepare to have your view of the beautiful game changed forever.

7. Fear and Loathing in La Liga: Barcelona vs Real Madrid by Sid Lowe (Yellow Jersey, 7th Aug)
A great title for a great book about a great rivalry. Spanish football expert Sid Lowe gives us the full and bloody history, both on and off the pitch. Politics, culture, economics, language and of course football – tension and drama as far as the eye can see. Click here to read John Mottram’s review.

8. The Nowhere Men: The Unknown Story of Football’s True Talent Spotters by Michael Calvin (Arrow, 14th Aug)
Ever wondered how the likes of Jack Wilshere and Raheem Sterling were discovered? This fascinating look at the hidden world of football scouts tell you everything you want to know about the sport’s unsung heroes. One of 2013’s most highly-acclaimed sports books.

8 Football Books to look out for in 2014

March

Sol Campbell: The Authorised Biography by Simon Astaire (Spellbinding Media)
This first ever authorised portrait of the Tottenham, Arsenal and England legend should be fascinating. Racism, homophobia, the Judas switch across North London, the Notts County debacle – it’s a story that has it all. Despite his high-profile career, Sol remains a quiet, sensitive enigma – I’m hoping for a Philippe Auclair-style character study.

The Game of Our Lives: How Football Made Britain Great by David Goldblatt (Penguin)
Goldblatt follows up his mammoth global history, The Ball is Round, with a more pared-down look at his homeland over the last two decades. The spectacular rise of the Premier League is explained within the social context of post-Thatcherite Britain – Penguin call it ‘a must-read for the thinking football fan’.

April

Andrea Pirlo: The Autobiography (BackPage Press)
Originally published in Italian last year as Penso Quindi Gioco (I Think, Therefore I Play), the Italian maestro’s story is about to reach a worldwide audience. ‘The Architect’ has won it all: 2 Champions League medals, 4 Scudetto titles, a Coppa Italia and a World Cup. He’s the ultimate creative thinker on the pitch and, if the snippets that BackPage have released in their brilliant #PirloThursday tweets are anything to go by, he’s no different off it.

Danish Dynamite: The Story of Football’s Greatest Cult Team by Rob Smyth, Lars Eriksen and Mike Gibbons (Bloomsbury)
Before the Euro 1992 winners, there was ‘Danish Dynamite’, the hip, Hummel-clad, Michael Laudrup-led side who rose from international obscurity to become everyone’s second favourite team thanks to their exciting performances at Euro 1984 and World Cup 1986. Told for the first time, this story should be just as much of a surprise hit.

May

Bend it like Bullard (Headline)
From a cult team to a cult player. Soccer AM-favourite Jimmy Bullard is a cockney geezer with a smile on his face and stories to tell. At 20, he swapped painting and decorating for professional football, working his way up to the Premier League with surprise package Wigan Athletic, before spells at Fulham and Hull. All-action and larger-than-life, Bullard is guaranteed entertainment. I wonder if Nick Barmby gets a mention?

Thirty-One Nil: The Amazing Story of World Cup Qualification by James Montague (Bloomsbury)
James ‘The Indiana Jones of soccer writing’ Montague received widespread acclaim for When Friday Comes, his 2009 book on football in the Middle East during the Arab Spring (When Friday Comes). Since then, he’s been travelling the globe, following the (mis)fortunes of international minnows attempting to qualify for the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. A funny and insightful exploration of a whole lot more than sport.

August

In Search of Duncan Ferguson: The Life and Crimes of a Footballing Enigma by Alan Pattullo (Mainstream)
This first ever biography of one of British football’s fiercest competitors should be an absolute treat. To date, Ferguson’s footballing legacy is unequivocally negative; the most red cards in Premier League history and the first professional footballer jailed for an offence committed on the pitch. And yet, ‘Big Dunc’ is also still the Premier League’s highest ever scoring Scot, a classic target man who combined aerial prowess with genuine skill. A talent deserving of examination, then.

Autumn

Roy Keane with Roddy Doyle (Orion)
I’m not sure publishing has ever seen anything quite like it; a bitterly controversial footballing icon teaming up with a Booker Prize-winning novelist. The second instalment of Keane’s autobiography, provisionally titled ‘The Second Half’, promises to be every bit as fascinating as the first. Said to blend ‘memoir and motivational writing’, it’s sure to include a response to Sir Alex’s recent comments.