The Ultimate Guide To Football Books

In conjunction with Amazon, EPL Talk brings you a comprehensive list of the top 18 football books on the beautiful game. If you’re looking for something to read, pick from any of the following recommended books.
At the foot of each book entry is a link to purchase the book from Amazon, as well as a a link for you to participate in a book discussion group. I encourage each of you who have read any of the books listed below, or who are currently reading them, to post questions, observations and book reviews so that the entire EPL Talk reader community can participate. Just one note: Please don’t post any spoilers for those who are currently reading the books.
Plus, you can listen to interviews with some of the authors below as they discuss their book and other intelligent football topics.
Here are the top 18 recommended football books for this summer:
1. The Damned Utd by David Peace. Overachieving and eccentric football manager Brian Clough was on his way to take over at the country’s most successful, and most reviled, football club: Leeds United, home to a generation of fiercely competitive but aging players. The battle he’d face there would make or break the club – or him. David Peace’s extraordinarily inventive novel tells the story of a world characterized by fear of failure and hunger for success set in the bleak heart of the 1970s.
2. Bloody Confused by Chuck Culpepper. In the throes of becoming jaded and cynical about the American sportswriting scene, Culpepper, a London-based Los Angeles Times journalist covering European sporting events, writes about the internationally known Premiership soccer league and its overzealous fans. The rough-and tumble British soccer sport quickly captivates Culpepper, who wrote on American sports for 15 years, as he learns the rivalries between the fans and teams such as Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and Portsmouth.
- Buy the book.
- Participate in the book discussion.
- Listen to the podcast interview with Chuck Culpepper.
3. The Fix by Declan Hill. The Fix is the most explosive story of sports corruption in a generation. Intriguing, riveting, and compelling, it tells the story of an investigative journalist who sets out to examine the world of match-fixing in professional soccer.
4. Inverting The Pyramid by Jonathan Wilson. Soccer fans love to argue about the tactics a manager puts into play, and this fascinating study traces the world history of tactics, from modern pioneers right back to the beginning, where chaos reigned. Along the way, author Jonathan Wilson, an erudite and detailed writer who never loses a sense of the grand narrative sweep, takes a look at the lives of the great players and thinkers who shaped the game, and discovers why the English in particular have proved themselves so “unwilling to grapple with the abstract.” This is a modern classic of soccer writing that followers of the game will dip into again and again.
5. The Miracle Of Castel di Sangro by Joe McGinniss. With the growing popularity of soccer in North America, McGinniss has written the rags-to-riches story of how an Italian soccer team, Castel di Sangro from the Abruzzi region, rose through the ranks from the very bottom (Terza Categoria) to the Serie BAa remarkable feat. There are eight steps to reach the world’s best league, the Serie A. The Italian press was motivated by the achievement of Castel di Sangro, referring to the club as the “Lilliputi.” More than a mere history of the team’s improbable season, this book provides the reader with insights into the passionate world of Italian soccer. The journey documents the trials and tribulations surrounding a professional sports team.
6. How Soccer Explains The World by Franklin Foer. The global power of soccer might be a little hard for Americans, living in a country that views the game with the same skepticism used for the metric system and the threat of killer bees, to grasp fully. But in Europe, South America, and elsewhere, soccer is not merely a pastime but often an expression of the social, economic, political, and racial composition of the communities that host both the teams and their throngs of enthusiastic fans. New Republic editor Franklin Foer, a lifelong devotee of soccer dating from his own inept youth playing days to an adulthood of obsessive fandom, examines soccer’s role in various cultures as a means of examining the reach of globalization. Foer’s approach is long on soccer reportage, providing extensive history and fascinating interviews on the Rangers-Celtic rivalry and the inner workings of AC Milan, and light on direct discussion of issues like world trade and the exportation of Western culture.
7. Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby. Fever Pitch is not a typical memoir–there are no chapters, just a series of match reports falling into three time frames (childhood, young adulthood, manhood). While watching the May 2, 1972, Reading v. Arsenal match, it became embarrassingly obvious to the then 15-year-old that his white, suburban, middle-class roots made him a wimp with no sense of identity: “Yorkshire men, Lancastrians, Scots, the Irish, blacks, the rich, the poor, even Americans and Australians have something they can sit in pubs and bars and weep about.” But a boy from Maidenhead could only dream of coming from a place with “its own tube station and West Indian community and terrible, insoluble social problems.”
8. The Ball Is Round: A Global History Of Soccer by David Goldblatt. There may be no cultural practice more global than soccer. Rites of birth and marriage are infinitely diverse, but the rules of soccer are universal. No world religion can match its geographical scope. The single greatest simultaneous human collective experience is the World Cup final. In this extraordinary tour de force, David Goldblatt tells the full story of soccer’s rise from chaotic folk ritual to the world’s most popular sport-now poised to fully establish itself in the USA. Already celebrated internationally, The Ball Is Round illuminates soccer’s role in the political and social histories of modern societies, but never loses sight of the beauty, joy, and excitement of the game itself.
9. Brilliant Orange by David Winner. Soccer fans will not want to miss this chronicle of the rise of Total Football (soccer, of course, is known as football everywhere but in North America). What is Total Football? Here you have to get a little philosophical; you have to learn to handle phrases like “a new theory of flexible space” to wrap your mind around the idea that a football pitch isn’t merely a big rectangle. The Dutch, who invented Total Football about three decades ago, are, according to Winner, a nation of special neurotics. Because space is always at a premium in their small country, they’ve learned to use it in wildly innovative ways. This is seen in their architecture, their art, their society–and their soccer. While other teams were playing the traditional every-player-in-his-position style of game, the plucky Dutch team called Ajax began playing a whole new game based on position-switching: defenders would suddenly become attackers and vice versa, thus substantially reducing the amount of repetitive back-and-forth running. This technique was revolutionary for its time (the 1960s), and it propelled Holland to the top of the soccer world. This extremely well written and exciting book, like Nick Hornby’s immensely enjoyable Fever Pitch (1993), catches us up in its enthusiasm and puts us right there in the grandstands cheering for the Dutch coaches and players who changed the game of soccer forever.
10. Seeing Red by Graham Poll. A Premier League and international referee with 26 years of combined experience, Graham Poll handled some of the toughest games in soccer history—in total more than 1,500 matches—before his retirement in 2007. In this brilliant, no-holds-barred autobiography, Poll reveals what really goes on between the players in the tunnel before a match and in the dressing room after, and unveils the true nature behind the nicest and the nastiest figures in the game. Poll also shares private conversations with the likes of Alex Ferguson, Jose Mourinho, Sepp Blatter, and Steve McClaren, and the inside story behind controversial incidents involving Roy Keane, David Beckham, Patrick Vieira, and current England captain John Terry, among others. The infamous 2006 World Cup match—during which he failed to send off a Croatian player after he earned three yellow cards—that brought Poll home early in disgrace and nearly ruined his career is covered as well. Honest and eye-opening, this is a gripping behind the scenes look from one of the beautiful game’s most noted figures.
- Buy the book.
- Participate in the book discussion.
- Listen to the podcast interview with Graham Poll.
11. Football Against The Enemy by Simon Kuper. Throughout the world, football is a potent force in the lives of billions of people. Focusing national, political and cultural identities, football is the medium through which the world’s hopes and fears, passions and hatreds are expressed. Simon Kuper travelled to 22 countries from South Africa to Italy, from Russia to the USA, to examine the way football has shaped them. At the same time he tried to find out what lies behind each nation’s distinctive style of play, from the carefree self-expression of the Brazilians to the anxious calculation of the Italians. During his journeys he met an extraordinary range of players, politicians and – of course – the fans themselves, all of whom revealed in their different ways the unique place football has in the life of the planet.
- Buy the book.
- Participate in the book discussion.
- Listen to the podcast interview with Simon Kuper.
12. The Italian Job by Gianluca Vialli and Gabriele Marcotti. Soccer lies at the heart of popular culture around the world. It is played, watched, written about, and talked to death by millions virtually every day of the year. But how do the characteristics of England and Italy—two of the most passionate soccer playing countries—affect the game in these two nations? Do the national stereotypes of Italians as fervent, stylish lotharios and the English as cold-hearted eccentrics still hold true when they kick a ball around? For the first time, a player of the first rank—Gianluca Vialli—in conjunction with sportswriter and broadcaster Gabriele Marcotti, tackles this debate head on, and they have invited some of the biggest names to join them. Sir Alex Ferguson, Jose Mourinho, Arsene Wenger, Sven Goran Eriksson, Fabio Capello, and Marcello Lippi, among others, add their not inconsiderable weight to the highest-profile symposium on soccer ever convened. Every aspect of the game is explored, be it tactical and technical or cultural and sociological. Stuffed full of controversial opinions and gripping revelations, this study on the sport takes you on a journey to the very heart of two of the world’s great soccer cultures.
- Buy the book.
- Participate in the book discussion.
- Listen to the podcast interview with Gabriele Marcotti.
13. Among The Thugs by Bill Buford. The American-born editor of the British literary magazine Granta presents a horrifying, searing account of the young British men who turn soccer matches at home and abroad into battlegrounds and slaughterhouses. Buford, resident in England for the last 15 years, set out to get acquainted with these football supporters–as their fellow Britons call them in more measured moments–to learn what motivates their behavior. He discovered a group of violent, furiously nationalistic, xenophobic and racist young men, many employed in high-paying blue-collar jobs, who actively enjoy destroying property and hurting people, finding “absolute completeness” in the havoc they wreak. He also discerned strong elements of latent homosexuality in this destructive male bonding. Following his subjects from local matches to contests in Italy, Germany and Sardinia, Buford shows that they are the same wherever they go: pillaging soldiers fighting a self-created war.
14. Morbo by Phil Ball. English writer Phil Ball has put the history of Spanish football into the context of the epomymous Morbo. Hard to pin down in translation (though the author manfully spends a chapter trying to explain the term in its fullest sense), “morbo” encapsulates the fierce rivalry across a club scene fragmented by history, language and politics. The bitter feeling between Barcelona and Real Madrid has, of course, been well-documented elsewhere. Here that famous rivalry is only one component of a landscape of antagonism. In particular, the Basque country in the north-west and Seville in the south both provide breeding grounds for a healthy portion of “morbo”, and receive Ball’s attention accordingly. The narrative captures the essence of that feeling perfectly, without failing to inform on a historical basis. A splendid chapter traces the ancestry of football in Spain back to the labourers in the English-owned copper mines in Huelva, Andalucia. While Spanish club football has always had its stars, from Di Stefano to Cruyff and Butragueno through to Raul and Luis Figo today, Ball shows that there is a greater force running in its lifeblood. Yet still there remains a paradox; he analyses the historical under-achievement of the Spanish national side in major international tournaments.
- Buy the book.
- Participate in the book discussion.
- Listen to the podcast interview with Phil Ball.
15. A Season With Verona by Tim Parks. The book sets a daunting task of analyzing the life and mindset of a soccer fan in the wake of Nick Hornby’s runaway hit, Fever Pitch, which is to many one of the finer books on soccer. He takes the reader on a tour of Italy, supporting his adopted home team of Hellas Verona through a season in Serie A. Parks in part sets out to examine the Italian national consciousness through the lens of Verona supporters. “The north-east of Italy, Verona in particular, is stigmatized as irretrievably racist. It is also considered bigoted, workaholic, uncultured, crude and gross.” Hellas Verona have prided themselves on never having a black player on the pitch (until recently). Their fans shout monkey chants whenever an opposing black player touches the ball. It’s a disgraceful part of soccer behavior that is well worth exploring, and this is when Parks is at his best. “I suggest… that the frequent talk about `defeating’ racism on the terraces is a mistake.
16. Soccer In A Football World by David Wangerin. In 1987, sick of defending an “un-American” activity, soccer-mad Wisconsinite Wangerin immigrated to England. After many years of thinking that the U.S. “did not deserve” the game, his mixed feelings led him to research the States’ surprising history with the sport, which has often included plenty of drama if not always plenty of fans. In thorough fashion, Wangerin moves from past to present, covering our unique terminology (why do we call it soccer when the world calls it football?); peculiar rules (we have often played it our own way); governing bodies and leagues (there have been many); World Cup triumphs and missteps (many more of the latter); the ongoing fortunes of Major League Soccer; and, above all, the culture surrounding the game.
- Buy the book.
- Participate in the book discussion.
- Listen to the podcast interview with David Wangerin.
17. My Favourite Year edited by Nick Hornby. Roddy Doyle’s account of the Republic of Ireland’s triumphant journey through Italia ‘90 is just one of the many first-class pieces in this anthology of original football writing. Contributors include: Roddy Doyle, Harry Pearson, Harry Ritchie, Ed Horton, Olly Wicken, D.J. Taylor, Huw Richards, Nick Hornby, Chris Pierson, Matt Nation, Graham Brack, Don Watson and Giles Smith. ‘A new kind of football writing developed – passionate, disrespectful, self-mocking, yet steeped in personal bias. In book form, young writers such as Nick Hornby and Pete Davies became to the New Football Writing what Tom Wolfe and Hunter S. Thompson had been to the New Journalism’
18. The Beckham Experiment by Grant Wahl. With unprecedented access to the Galaxy and one-on-one interviews with Beckham, veteran Sports Illustrated writer Grant Wahl focuses on the inner circle of the experiment: Beckham, Galaxy leading scorer Landon Donovan, Simon Fuller, controversial former coach Ruud Gullit, outspoken former Galaxy president Alexi Lalas, and Mrs. Victoria “Posh Spice” Beckham. Wahl takes readers behind the scenes, on the road with the team and inside the locker room, to reveal just what happened on and off the field when the most renowned player in the world left the glamour of European soccer to play in a country that has yet to fully embrace the sport. We find out what his teammates really think of their superstar captain, who was calling the shots behind the scenes, how Beckham’s management conducted a shadow takeover of the Galaxy organization, and if the team plans to embrace him–or not–when he returns from AC Milan for the 2009 season.
Are there any books that aren’t listed above that you feel should be added to the list? Click the comments link below and share your opinion.
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{ 33 comments }
Soccerhead: An Accidental Journey into the Heart of the American Game
by Jim Haner
Among the Thugs is quite engrossing. If there is a future reprint of the book, Buford should add a foreword as to where some of the supporters are now…
I agree. I remember reading Among The Thugs and not being able to put it down. The world of soccer hooliganism has changed considerably since that time, but that’s definitely a book I wouldn’t mind reading again.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
Sports Illustrated has an excerpt from Wahl’s book:
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2009/writers/the_bonus/06/29/beckham.book/?eref=sircrc
Are you serious? I bought bloody confused for all the promoting it was given here in the states, and couldn’t wait to read it. When i started reading, i realized that this moron, couldn’t stay away from comparisions about some american football game, baseball game, basketball game, or ncaa tourney game that he had experinced. As i loyal english premiership follower, i don’t want to read about some american game. I want premiership! I’ll never buy a book by chuck culpepper again. I did read fever pitch, how soccer explains the world, and beckham: both feet on the ground and love them!
I enjoyed the book and thought it was quite funny, in a Bill Bryson way.
It’s definitely more for the soccer fans who are new to the Premier League. But still, some of his observations about English supporters were classic and spot on — especially the stories about the fans he sat next to who would ignore him, while complete strangers would give him high-fives and hugs in America (or at least carry on a conversation with him).
Cheers,
The Gaffer
Culpepper’s book was neither insightful or funny. Just a terrible book. Foer’s book was nice, particularly its global-ness. It was interesting to read a little about teams in various countries, such as ed Star Belgrade and Vasco, teams which are not normally the subjects of Enlgish-language books. Next up for me is Goldblatt’s book.
When Saturday Comes–the book, is a very enjoyable read(I’ve only read the pages for view on Amazon, but going by content so far and the eponymous website , it promises much).
The Ball Is Round and WSC are two books I am looking to finish this summer.Thanks for the list, Gaffer.
Speaking of When Saturday Comes, the book, I quite enjoyed “My Favourite Year” which is listed in the top 18 above. Reason being is that it was my first introduction to many football writers — wonderful scribes such as Harry Pearson and Roddy Doyle (who went on to write the fantastic book, The Commitments, that was made into a movie).
Cheers,
The Gaffer
Let’s see, I’ve read … nine of them.
Inverting the Pyramid, the geekiest one, was my favorite (naturally
).
My recommendation for an addition to the list: Futebol: Soccer The Brazilian Way by Alex Bellos.
I’m in the middle of reading Inverting The Pyramid right now and am thoroughly enjoying it. Next on my reading list, sitting next to my bed, is The Ball Is Round.
The Futebol book sounds quite interesting. I’ll have to check that out.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
I’m about 70 pages through Inverting The Pyramid and I’m extremely impressed. It might best sports book I’ve ever read. I’m amazed at how effortlessly Wilson blends different concepts and people and countries. The narrative is perfectly woven (so far, at least).
The most interesting part for me so far is the dichotomy between playing the game beautifully and playing it to win that was inherent in the early days of soccer/football (and still is, I believe). As an American, it’s a completely foreign concept (no pun intended). Our professional sports are never played for beauty; they’re only played to win. Could you imagine if an American football coach or a basketball coach was complaining about the ugliest of an opponent’s style of play? He’d be crucified in the press and vilified by the team’s fans. In American sports nothing matters except a ‘W.’
Also, I can’t believe that in mid-to-late 19th century England, superiority in sport was supposed to be effortless!
Matt, I found the same thing too when reading the book. Football has changed considerably, especially in formations, but there’s still the massive debate between winning and playing beautiful football. Quite an eyeopening book indeed.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
A Brilliant Orange by David WInner is an absolute dinger of a book, read it a number of years ago and was blown away. Covers every possible angle of Dutch football, great read.
The Italian Job is also a good book but some of the parallels the pair draw seem a little bit dated at this point. Thought provoking nonetheless.
Among the Thugs was the inspiration behind our blog that chronicles our passion for a sport that our country somewhat ignores. Thanks to this work we have created a site to attempt to share with others what football has done for us, or maybe to us, from a state-side point of view.
I am also a huge fan of How Soccer Explains the World.
Good job boys, fantastic list.
I thoroughly enjoyed “Behind the Curtain: Travels in Eastern European Football” and highly recommend it.
I’m glad to see A Season With Verona on the list, I absolutely loved that book (if you enjoy his writing he’s also written an interesting fiction book called Europa, it is however not at all football-related). A really great book not up there is The Far Corner by Harry Pearson. Basically one man tries to see as much North East (England) football as he can in one season. He does a little match report on each game, interspersed with history and that classic British self-deprecating humor. The most interesting part is when he (presumably unknowingly) expresses the bias and bitterness the North East holds against the rest of the country.
Harry Pearson is a genius and a comedian. I interviewed him a couple of years ago for the EPL Talk Podcast in a very enjoyable episode. Check it out at http://www.epltalk.com/epl-talk-podcast/harry-pearson-interview/
Cheers,
The Gaffer
Thanks Gaffer, I’ll be sure to check that out, I subscribe to the podcast now
Thanks Matilda. Be sure to go through the archives of the EPL Talk Podcast on iTunes, too, for more great interviews.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
This is a great list – thanks for putting it together. I’m especially interested in Inverting the Pyramid.
For those that are interested, I’ve started my book review series. I lead off with Love & Blood” and Bloody Confused. I should hit most of these before I’m done.
Love and Blood is another classic football book, this time by Jamie Trecker and highly recommended. Good choice.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
What I don’t get is you have all these great books but you put the two books they pimped out on WSD in the top 3, why does everybody feel the need to kiss that wanker Steven Cohen’s ass? Bloody Confused is not a great book and Declan Hill did the same expose that’s been done a thousand times and to put those books ahead of Fever Pitch, The Ball is Round, Brilliant Orange and all the others is insane.
Everything is subjective in life. I thoroughly enjoyed Bloody Confused, and I know plenty of people who enjoyed reading The Fix. The other books you mentioned are great ones, too, but the above list has nothing to do with a football radio show.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
I really like Bloody Confused
I’m looking for a book with EPL player seasonal/career stats like the type provided by Opta. Any recommendations?
Mike, I would recommend checking out this book:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sky-Sports-Football-Yearbook-2009-2010/dp/0755319486/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1248691174&sr=8-1
You may want to check the customer reviews for previous seasons of the book to make sure it provides you with exactly what you’re looking for.
Cheers,
The Gaffer
Can anyone recommend the best of the number of EPL annuals? I’m looking for something similar to the U.S. preseason magazines on various sports, not one with all kinds of stats, which are overblown in footie anyway. Thanks!
Excellent question Ira. It’s been a few years since I was last in the UK, so there may be other readers who can provide better advice, but here’s something I would recommend checking out — Sky Sports Magazine at: http://www.skysports.com/magazine/story/0,25070,15225_5448272,00.html
Cheers,
The Gaffer
I thoroughly enjoyed “Football Mad! A Modern Satire of a Very Old Sport”
ISBN 978-1-4389-1845-7
Finn McCool’s Football Club: The Birth, Death and Resurrection of a Pub Soccer Team in the City of the Dead
Eamon Dunphy’s “Only a Game” is probably the greatest football book ever written. Dunphy writes a diary of a season playing for Millwall in the 1970’s. Brilliant read.
I just got a Kindle for my birthday. Does anyone have any recommendations of football books to read on a Kindle (that are available in the Kindle Store on Amazon)?
Cheers,
The Gaffer
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