
These books are recommend for the fan who isn’t
afraid of a little self-knowledge.
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Among
the Thugs, by Bill Buford
The hooliganism that Buford chronicled in the late 1980’s
has largely been tamed, but as a look at the ugly side of fandom, Among
the Thugs is unmatched. Buford joins soccer thugs in the
U.K. for one horrendous (and usually alcohol-infused) riot after
another. In Fever Pitch, Horby takes a swipe at this
book as an example of slumming, but how do you follow people
who drink themselves into oblivion and suck out the eyeballs
of their rivals (literally) without slumming? A classic. |
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Friday
Night Lights, by H.G. Bissinger
Bissinger lifts the lid on the all-consuming power of high-school
football over the town of Odessa, Texas. In a small town, the
boundaries between the fans, players, families and the school
administrators break down, and Bissinger manages to capture the
incredible psychological ramifications for all. Look for the movie
(at long last) in October.
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Fever
Pitch, by Nick Hornby
Before he was a super-hip novelist, Nick Hornby was just a crazed
Arsenal fan. Here he examines his life through the lens of his
obsession (he correlates major events in his youth not to his
age at the time, but to key games in Arsenal’s past.) This
book inspired me to go to a couple of Arsenal matches at Highbury,
which were incredible brooding affairs. You don’t have
to have seen a single soccer game (or even to have heard of Arsenal)
to get into this book.
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A
Fan’s Notes, by Frederick
Exley
Simultaneously a tale of fan obsession and a chronicle of an
alcoholic’s crawl through the wreckage of his life, this “fictional
memoir,” as the author deemed it, is by far the best written
book about a fan’s life. The New York Giants act as a blank
screen onto which the narrator projects the aspirations he had
for his relationship with his popular, achieving father, his
wife, his career. This book is brutal, and of course especially
sad, because Exley’s life so closely resembled the narrator’s.
But if you can stomach it, and tolerate the narrator’s
unrelenting misogyny, it’s an incredibly moving and harrowing
read.
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Paper
Lion, by George Plimpton
This would be an antidote to Exley; the late George Plimpton’s
account of his time in the training camp of the Detroit Lions – as
a player. Wearing number “0,” Plimpton actually gets
a few snaps during an exhibition game and the result is as hilarious
as it is ugly. This is the ultimate tale of fan vicariousness
gone awry. A new edition was recently published, just before
Plimpton’s death, with a new, predictably entertaining
introduction by the author.
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Sport
Fans, Daniel Wann, et al editors.
If you really want to get in touch with your inner sports geek,
you should have a look at this one. It’s a very accessible
compendium of much of the major psychological and sociological
research on sports fans; my favorite section, which I cite in
Rammer Jammer, is an examination of the stereotypes of sports
fans – that we’re lazy, depressed, unfulfilled, etc. – all
of which have been roundly debunked. (Did you know, for example,
that studies comparing depression rates of fans to non-fans have
found that fans are less depressed than non-fans?)
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Sports
Spectators, by Allen Guttman
This is a fascinating and very accessible look at fandom by a
distinguished professor of American studies at Amhearst. I relied
on the book heavily for Guttman’s research on the history
of sports fandom.
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The Crowd,
by Gustave Le Bon
The first major work of crowd theory; a slightly longer than
pamphlet-sized meditation on the behavior of crowds, written
in the 19th century, when what Le Bon calls “psychological
crowds” – crowds who were linked not necessarily
by being in the same place at the same time, but by media, and
word of mouth – were ascendant. Le Bon argues that a crowd
becomes like a single organism, with its own thoughts and mode
of behavior which are separate from the thoughts and behaviors
of its individual members. |
These last two just come
out, so I haven’t had a chance to
read them yet. But they’ve both received
positive reviews.
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How
Soccer Explains the World,
by Franklin Foer
A number of reviewers have had a problem with the title of this
book, saying that it overreaches. My guess is their irony meters
are gummed up. It sounds to me like a playful boast meant to
grab your attention, not an earnest hard-sell of the book’s
contents. At any rate, I’m looking forward to reading it
and I’ll add a few notes when I do. |
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The
Meaning of Sports, by Michael
Mandelbaum
Ditto
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