basokla
Well-Known Member
Apologies if there is already a thread about this somewhere – I could not find it.
I just finished reading the book a couple nights ago. Was an interesting read even though I was not expecting the tone of the book to be the way it developed. I wasn’t that familiar with Conn’s writings in general and I guess had I researched him a bit more I would have known what to expect.
My initial thoughts:
Liked the chapter that talked about the final day in 2012. Interesting narrative about the weeks leading up to the final day, the week of the final match, the day of the QPR match and even the day of the parade.
I especially liked the part where he talked about visiting the Maine Road site before the match. I will say however that I could have done without the section about the lady who was losing her job due to a lack of government funding – we get it David – you don’t like the fact that large sums of cash are going into football now when there are other parts of society that struggle.
I was not expecting the chapter that showed his infatuation with FC United. Just caught me off guard and seemed to go on too long.
After finishing the book, I also can’t escape the feeling that I’m playing the role of a very small cog in the machine that is ruining the game – or at least the “following City” part of the game – for him and other longtime fans. I’m really curious if there are a significant number of longtime supporters that do truly feel jaded about the money, the ticket prices, “glory hunters”, etc.
Anyway, I was wondering what a good follow-up read would be. Would like something that’s more historical and less observational.
I just finished reading the book a couple nights ago. Was an interesting read even though I was not expecting the tone of the book to be the way it developed. I wasn’t that familiar with Conn’s writings in general and I guess had I researched him a bit more I would have known what to expect.
My initial thoughts:
Liked the chapter that talked about the final day in 2012. Interesting narrative about the weeks leading up to the final day, the week of the final match, the day of the QPR match and even the day of the parade.
I especially liked the part where he talked about visiting the Maine Road site before the match. I will say however that I could have done without the section about the lady who was losing her job due to a lack of government funding – we get it David – you don’t like the fact that large sums of cash are going into football now when there are other parts of society that struggle.
I was not expecting the chapter that showed his infatuation with FC United. Just caught me off guard and seemed to go on too long.
After finishing the book, I also can’t escape the feeling that I’m playing the role of a very small cog in the machine that is ruining the game – or at least the “following City” part of the game – for him and other longtime fans. I’m really curious if there are a significant number of longtime supporters that do truly feel jaded about the money, the ticket prices, “glory hunters”, etc.
Anyway, I was wondering what a good follow-up read would be. Would like something that’s more historical and less observational.