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Good Ebooks (preferably Sports Autobiographies)

Gravesend_Addick
Posts: 7,299
HI all
I'm going on holiday next week. I'm planning on it being a very relaxing holiday on the beach. With that in mind, can anybody recommend any good books to download on the kindle for me to read whilst soaking up the sun?
My personal preference is sporting autobiographies but am open to any recommendations.
Many thanks in advance
I'm going on holiday next week. I'm planning on it being a very relaxing holiday on the beach. With that in mind, can anybody recommend any good books to download on the kindle for me to read whilst soaking up the sun?
My personal preference is sporting autobiographies but am open to any recommendations.
Many thanks in advance
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Comments
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A couple of more obscure ones:
Flying Scotsman about Graham over the cyclist is good
There is a book by Charlie speeding who was a British marathon runner in the 80's that is not bad either.1 -
Tony Cascarino's book is a very good read.
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'Success to Failure' by Roland Duchâtelet is supposed to be a good read4
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Just started to read Zlatan Ibrahimovich's it looks likely to be great, he simply describes himself as marvellous or amazing and full of goals.2
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Andre Agassi's book Open is very good.1
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Also liked How Not to be a Football Millionaire.1
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How does it end?eaststandmike said:'Success to Failure' by Roland Duchâtelet is supposed to be a good read
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Soccernomics is next on my list. Not a autobiography but supposedly really interesting.
The only football autobiography I've ever read was "Gerrard - my autobiography" which I read when I was about 15. I enjoyed it but it was probably a bit shit.2 -
Paul Lake (ex Man City) book is meant to be very good2
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Read it a few years ago. Very good. "I'm not really here" is the title I think. City fans always used to bang on and on about Lake. Would've been England captain etc etc.AFKABartram said:Paul Lake (ex Man City) book is meant to be very good
Secret footballer books are a good read too Chrissy, if you've not read them.1 - Sponsored links:
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The secret footballer books are such an easy read.
Loved em.2 -
Soccernomics or "Why England Lose." It's not the lightest of reading, because it is about data analysis in football (stay with me), but it's really gripping (I know, I know, but trust me) and it will make you look at the game differently.
"The Italian Job" by Gianlucca Vialla and Gab Marcotti is really, really good. It's party GV autobiography, part comparisons between English and Italian football with insight from a variety of important people (keep in mind it was written around 2006). Good read, light read.
Inverting the Pyramid, Jonathan Wilson. Want to be a football hipster? This is your "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot." Seriously though, it's a wonderful look at football history and how tactics evolve down the years. He's a great writer, and it's far more gripping than it sounds. Also, his book "Football Behind the Curtain" is really good, and lighter. Anecdotal stories about football in the former USSR.
"English Football: A German View of the Beautiful Game" by Rafa Honigstein. stories of his time as a German reporter in English. Similar to The Italian Job in that it takes an outsiders' cultural perspective on English football. Really interesting and enlightening.1 -
The nowhere men is a great. All about football scouts and their existence. The author, Michael Calvin also has a new one out now called living on the volcano.1
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Mike Tysons autobiography is great1
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Really good read that one.AFKABartram said:Paul Lake (ex Man City) book is meant to be very good
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Paul McGrath's book is not a football story but a human story that goes from a hard, hidden childhood in Dublin’s orphanages to a public struggle with alcoholism and a life lived on the edge of chaos.
At times a very touching story.1 -
Ian Poulters book is worth a read, for something slightly different try Shoe Dog it is the autobiography of Phil Knight founder of Nike0
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Not os much a biography as an account of football pressures from a manager's perspective called Living On The Volcano by Michael Calvin.1
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I think therefore I play, Pirlo's book. Good read!2
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If you are an old git and remember him then Jimmy Connors' autobiography is a good read.0
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If Garry Nelson's booms are ebooks... buy them. Soccernomics is great1
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Slightly off topic as you'd prefer sports autobiographies, but consider American Sniper by Chris Kyle. You may already know of the story as it was made into a Hollywood film, it's written be Chris Kyle himself. I usually prefer sports bios myself but I read this whilst on holiday and couldn't put it down.1
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Probably not your traditional holiday read but the book A Life Too Short by Ronald Reng about Robert Enke is incredibly moving.
From what I recall, the two were friends and had planned to write Enke's autobiography before he took his own life after a battle with depression.
A very sad story but brilliantly covered.1