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The Striker's Fear of the Open Goal
 
 

The Striker's Fear of the Open Goal [Kindle Edition]

Andy Conway
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

Print List Price: £7.63
Kindle Price: £3.31 includes VAT* & free wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
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Product Description

Product Description

Get a life. Get the girl. Get to Wembley.

Ewan Glumie was born on the day Man City last won a trophy, and for 35 years it's been failure for both of them. City have won nothing since, and he's exiled in Birmingham, temping in a job he hates and living with an ex who hates him. But success might be on the horizon. City are heading for an FA Cup final and Ewan knows he has to get a ticket, get a career and get a girl before it happens or forever accept that he's the jinx, and that the gloating '35 Years' banner at Old Trafford is more about him than City.

The Striker's Fear of the Open Goal is a desperate, comic look at how a football team can be the most depressing thing in a man's life... and the only thing worth living for.

NOTE: This is NOT a Family Stand book! It's about hard drinking men who like their football and swear a hell of a lot. It's also about love and failure and passion and hope. But with swearing. Lots and lots of swearing.


PRAISE BY MAN CITY FANS:

'This is our Fever Pitch.'

“In ten years’ time, when my son asks me what it was like to win that first trophy after 35 years, I’ll just give him your book and say ‘Here. Read this.’”

“A simple story of a man who has been floundering for quite some time and then decides take some chances and his life changes radically. There is the twist that this man’s life seems to parallel the fortune of the soccer team that has stomped on his heart for years. All in all it was done very well. If you are looking to liken it to something, think of a less sappy Nick Hornby.”

“Really enjoyed the book. You got some of the football so spot on and fantastic descriptions of Yaya’s goals.”

“Just read a great book about life as a blue paralleling life! Thoroughly enjoyed it! Thanks! Know loads who jibbed in at Wembley!”

“Not ashamed to say I got a little giddy reading the chapter about the semi-final.”

'I started reading it while waiting for a plane and didn’t put it down again (aside from going through passport control) til I finished it later that same night…'

'The description of Yaya Toure’s goal in the semi-final against United is some of the purest poetry I have ever read. It’s like one of Wordsworth’s spots of time, a writer opening a window between this world and paradise. Read it…'

'The scene where the main character has a deep and meaningful conversation with his dad, while secretly paying more attention to us beating Tottenham on TV, is reminiscent of more moments in my life than I would admit to anywhere else than on this City board….'

'The description of grudge temporary work in the modern office comes across like the eighth circle of Dante’s hell. I FEEL YOUR PAIN, EWAN.'

‘A wonderful encapsulation of the lows, highs and utter life affirming joy of our journey over the last 35 years supporting City. I am proud to have book that tells a lovely story and that captures part of my life!’

'I was in floods of tears with the Cup Final bit.'

'Very entertaining.'

'Absolutely mint.'

'Well worth a read — if only for his comments on Mark Hughes. And on Denise from Mongleton.'

'Just bought your book online and didn't draw breath til the final whistle of the semi... Brilliant. Utterly Brilliant.'

About the Author

Andy Conway was born in 1965, not 1976, and has been a City fan since about 1974 so accepts no responsibility for City's 35 years of failure. He wrote The Striker’s Fear of the Open Goal as part of a challenge to publish 11 ebook titles before 11 November 2011. His first feature film, Arjun and Alison, a campus revenge thriller, hit the international film festival circuit in 2013. He teaches screenwriting at Birmingham City University and runs the Shooting People Screenwriters Network bulletin, which goes out to 11,000 writers every weekday. He is not Ewan Glumie (though he admits things have got better for him since City's takeover). Read more at www.andyconway.net

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 755 KB
  • Print Length: 194 pages
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Unlimited
  • Publisher: Wallbank Books (28 July 2011)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B005F64B7C
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • X-Ray: Not Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #196,895 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Book 17 Nov 2011
Format:Paperback
I would love to pithily mark this book with 6, 1 more mark than is permitted. Anyone that has followed City over the years will relate to the sentiments of the author, but it should appeal to supporters of other clubs as well. A grate read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The inner life of the footbal fan laid bare 17 Nov 2011
Format:Paperback
How many not-quite-middle-aged-but-no-longer-young people are there outwardly struggling to make sense of their daily work and family lives but inwardly obsessing on something else, something that should be trivial but has become all consuming? A lot, I'd guess. In this case it's football. And while football related literature has become familiar since Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch, Andy Conway's book is a delightful addition to the genre. The main character relates his own failures in life to Manchester City's 35 trophy-less years in the wilderness and the novel narrates his shot at redemption against the background of City's ultimately winning FA cup run in 2011. It's a nice conceit and it's backed up with some wonderful writing. In particular, the brilliantly drawn evocation of soul-destroying temporary office work, so rarely captured in novels, will spark glum recognition among a generation of readers, irrespective of their interest in football. For football obsessives, the way Conway's character pays only half attention to his emotional life, engaging instead mainly with his team may spark guilty recognition, particularly when the main character explains his impending departure for a new life to a father already heart-broken by divorce. All the while, the character's eye secretly lingers on the TV as his team plays. The every finest writing of all is saved for the liberating joy of having your team deliver the redemption you've always wished for. In this case, the charged and poetic description of City's winning goal against Manchester United in the FA Cup semi final is a passage every football fan will thrill to.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Not the usual football book 20 Dec 2011
Format:Paperback
This is an interesting take on Manchester City's recent history, blending factual accounts of City's Champion's League qualification and the subsequent ending of 35 trophyless years, with an unfolding love story.

It gives an insight into what it feels like being a City fan of a certain age, the angst, the pithy unarsedness (sic), the hope, the despair. It also contains detailed instrucions on how to blag into Wembley stadium and ends on the highest of highs.

Recommended.
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