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Michael Hardcastle MBE (6 February 1933 – 17 January 2019) was a British author of sports fiction for children.He has written more than one hundred and forty books on a range of sporting subjects but is probably best known for his books about association football.
On Saturday 23 July 1898, the Melbourne weekly newspaper The Leader published The Footballers' Alphabet.. The poem, which had been written by its influential (Australian Rules) football correspondent, "Follower", [1] delivered a brief comment on a number of the most prominent Australian Rules footballers playing in Melbourne in 1898 -- the second year of the VFL competition -- presented in the ...
(Two other books written by party members, Gottfried Feder's Breaking The Interest Slavery and Alfred Rosenberg's The Myth of the Twentieth Century, have since lapsed into comparative literary obscurity.) [26] Hitler had made about 1.2 million ℛ︁ℳ︁ from sales of the book by 1933 (equivalent to €5,562,590 in 2021), when the average ...
The books follow young football star Simon "Specky" Magee through his teenage years. He is obsessed with AFL, as are most of his mates. Simon "Specky" Magee is the titular character of the novels. He attends local high school Booyong High throughout books 1–3 and 5–7, pausing for a short stint at Gosmore Grammar in book 4.
The book is composed entirely of letters written by the various characters to each other. Ring Lardner: You Know Me Al: 1916 Letters Lardner's first successful book; written by "Jack Keefe", a bush league baseball player, to a friend back home Doris Lessing: Shikasta: 1979 Letters and reports
Brian Lester Glanville (born 24 September 1931) is an English football writer and novelist. He was described by The Times as "the doyen of football writers—arguably the finest football writer of his—or any other—generation", [1] and by American journalist Paul Zimmerman as "the greatest football writer of all time."
The book is an examination of how offensive football strategy has evolved over the past three decades in two key ways: the development of the West Coast offense by Bill Walsh first at the Cincinnati Bengals and later at the San Francisco 49ers to great acclaim, and the 1981 arrival of linebacker Lawrence Taylor to the New York Giants.
The Secret Footballer is the pseudonym of a former Premier League footballer who contributed articles to The Guardian newspaper and has written five books, I Am The Secret Footballer, Tales From The Secret Footballer, The Secret Footballer's Guide to the Modern Game, The Secret Footballer: Access All Areas, and How to Win: Lessons from the Premier League.
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