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Bestie: A Portrait Of A Legend
 
 
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Bestie: A Portrait Of A Legend [Paperback]

Joe Lovejoy
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Sidgwick & Jackson (7 May 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0330367501
  • ISBN-13: 978-0330367509
  • Product Dimensions: 11.1 x 17.8 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 652,727 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Joe Lovejoy
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

George Best remains the greatest icon in British footballing history. Yet the truth of his story of success twinned with excess has always seemed as elusive as the man himself once proved to defenders the world over.

From humble origins in Belfast, Best rose to become the pre-eminent talent in European football in the late 1960s, helping Manchester United to European Cup success in 1968 at the age of 22. Yet like so many touched by genius, Best was made with a self-destruct button. The outline of the story is well-known, but Lovejoy helps fill in the blanks, from the drinking and womanising back in Best's halcyon days, into the abyss of alcoholism and bankruptcy, through the three-month prison sentence to a current life of personal appearances interspersed by drunken binges.

Never seeking to glorify the horrors of true alcoholism, this biography manages to perfectly capture Best's unique talent and maverick spirit and leaves one with a feeling of sadness that his unique talent went partially unfulfilled. Even then, it is clear that Best may have been the greatest footballer ever seen. So where did it all go wrong (as Best was once ironically asked by a porter who famously came across George in a hotel room with a beautiful blonde, bottles of champagne and a bed strewn with banknotes won at the local casino)? Best himself has offered no end of clues, including his frustration as an Irishman set never to play on football's world stage and the death of his mother through alcoholism. One suspects, however, he well knows that the answer lies within. --Trevor Crowe

Product Description

The bestselling authorized biography of a much loved football star.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Bestie - A Review 24 Aug 2009
By sb
Format:Paperback
To (ab)use the oft qouted football cliche - its a book of two halves. As it follows George's career, there is a definate split in his fortunes - George the player that many say will never be equalled, then George the man who struggled with alcoholism.

The first half of the book (there goes that cliche again) is for the admirers of George, for the fans of the game in whose eyes George could walk on water. Covering his start at Man Utd as a young lad living in digs, to winning the European Cup and his player of the year awards, for someone who never saw him play like me, it really does affirm just how good he was. Perhaps reading about the highs George gave to fans prior to drink taking over his life makes the second half that little bit harder to digest. Written with some very honest conversations and qoutes from and with the man himself, the darker side of George is covered here in all it's morbid and saddening detail. Honestly, if you still hold a candle for the man and want to remeber him as The Best, stop reading after he leaves Man Utd, I didnt, and it was very upsetting reading, especially as the book came out in the late nineties prior to his death a few years ago. The book does speculate as to how long George could maintain his giant appetite for the drink before it claimed him for ever.

Well deserves its five stars.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Long before the days of sarongs and stress clinics there was one true football character, the first soccer celebrity, the pioneer of the Beckham's and Owen's, the godfather of rock 'n' roll football, the soccer icon; George Best.

George's life is celebrated and chronicled in a new biography by Sunday Times Football correspondent Joe Lovejoy entitled Bestie. It provides a detailed and articlate account of the life of a legend- the booze, the birds and the football are all covered and the only surprise is that it takes just 372 pages to do it.

George Best is an ideal topic for a biography as there are endless topics and incidents to cover in a life packed full of drama. Lovejoy guides us through the rollercosrter that starts in Belfast going via Manchester, London, America returning to England's capital. Lovejoy's affectionate tone suggests that like any true football fan of his or any era they are totally in awe of the genius that was and still is George Best. This lead his manager of many years Sir Matt Busby to say to his assistant ' Don't coach hiom, he's genius'. As expected the book is full of superb football anecdotes including Best the perfectionist who whilst still at school in Belfast, worrying about being a one footed player reverted to only using his left in one game and scored 11 times.

Lovejoy's affectionate narration is supported by contributions from his peers and friends in the game such as Mike Summerbee, Dave Sadler and Rodney Marsh but it's the second half of the Sixties where Bests genius was arguably at its peak. Under the virtual parental guidance of manager Sir Matt Busby, Best and Manchester United flourished, blossomed and dominated the English and European game just as they are doing today. But this era was somewhat different with Best, Law ans Charlton being made legends.

So with all this success so soon it was probably only a matter of time before it all went wrong. Not before the Best of the late Sixties revelled in his unparrelled notoriety, being hailed as the fifth Beatle and adorning the bedroom walls of both sexes Best was now the first pop star footballer. As Manchester United declined so did Best. This occured in the early Seventies when United became an average First Division side and George's playboy lifestyle took over. Over the next 15 years Best retired, came back, left the club again, went to America, came back to Fulham, got married, played in England again, was declared bankrupt and jailed. But to Best all this is a little blurred. Football became secondary as the alcohol, gambling and the Miss Worlds took priority.

At about the same time as George's appetite for booze became almost intolerable to those close to him, one of those closest to him contracted the same disease. His mother Ann Best tee total till the age of 40 died because of booze some five years later in 1978. His Mothers death leads to an extremely touching chapter where both George and her clearly bessotted husband Dickie describe those last painful years of her life. This chapter is delicately dealt with by Lovejoy and would befit any book but provides a touching alternative to all of George's high jinx.

You can't help but feel sympathetic to the flawed genius as via Lovejoy's descriptions he seems such a genuine man who reacted in the only way he saw how when he had fame thrust upon him. Unlike the Owen's of today Best had no-one to learn from, he had to make his own mistakes but no doubt he had fun making them.

Lovejoy's account is unparalled in its excellence in the Football literature genre, where often the offerings are painful to read this isn a pleasure. It packs no punches giving a thoroughly detailed account of a life definitely lived. It dismisses the myth that Best was merely a boozing womaniser who treated football as a sideline but as a football obsessed genius who liked a drink and liked the ladies. For a first book this is definitely a great debut.

Review by Mark Stanford

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I should start by saying that I'm not from England nor was I around when George Best was at his prime. However, I am both a football and history fan, and so I heartily enjoyed Bestie: Portrait of a Legend.

I found this autobiograpy to be remarkably honest. Best is not proud of his crash, nor does he make light of it. It is simply presented as a life he has lived, with all of the gifts given him and the manner in which he blew it all.

I would recommend this book for everyone -- it's a cautionary tale for young people who view themselves as immortal; at the same time, it's also a wonderful case study on how a talented person can ruin his life.

Through the myriad opportunities that George Best both earned and was given, there seems to be a desire to drink his successes away. The co-author Lovejoy does a wonderful job in making this Canadian understand Best's profile in England and how the pressures ultimately destroyed a superstar. Two words: "buy it!"

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