The Keeper of Dreams: One Man's Controversial Story of Life in the English Premiership: The Incredible Story of a Goalkeeper
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Average customer review:Product Description
At the age of 28, German goalkeeper, Lars Leese was catapulted from a minor League football field somewhere near Cologne to a small industrial town in the north of England. Something of a culture shock, certainly, but nothing compared to finding himself in goal for Barnsley playing the mighty Liverpool at Anfield in front of over 45,000 spectators. Plucked from obscurity and playing in one of the most important Leagues in the world, Leese experienced in real life what thousands of boys - and men - can only dream of: stepping out of the crowd and onto a Premiership pitch. Lars Leese's foray into the wild world of professional football lasted only three years, but his journey from computer software salesman to Premiership goalie is a remarkable story. Here, Ronald Reng traces his stratospheric rise and equally alarming descent: the resulting narrative is an indispensable antidote to the traditional footballing biography and a unique - at times shocking - outsider's view of English life.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #287483 in Books
- Published on: 2003-09-05
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 234 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'Remarkable... Provides an extraordinary snap-shot of English behaviour in a professional football dressing-room and in a Yorkshire town.' Henry Winter, Daily Telegraph"
About the Author
Ronald Reng has been based in London for the last five years as a freelance sports journalist. He has written about English football for, amongst others, the Suddeutsche Zeitung, and Zurich's Tagesanzeiger.
Customer Reviews
'Keeper of Dreams' by Ronald Reng
A must-read for any young footballer who dreams of reaching the top, this is a vivid, but level-headed account of the spectacular rise and fall of Lars Leese, a beanpole German goalkeeper, who catapulted from playing in the very lowest reaches of a German local league, to a season in the English Premiership with newly promoted Barnsley. And then back again, with disconcerting speed.
It is a tale told with admirable honesty and generosity of spirit, and is full of detailed and intelligent observations about football culture in Germany and England. Leese (correctly pronounced 'Laser', but happy to be mispronounced in Barnsley) never shirks the truth or disguises his feelings, and the result is a compelling read.
Total And Utter Class!!!
I cautiously bought this book, wondering about just how good it would be, but as i'm such a MASSIVE football fan i thought why not i'll have a try.
I got the book home and i couldn't put it down. Lars Leese's story is an amazing one and the book is written in a very skilled and personal manner.
I would recommend this to just about every football fan on the planet as it is by far one of the best books i have ever read.
An eye-opener
The name Lars Leese doesn't mean a thing to me. Apparently he played for Barnsley when they had a season in the Premier League back in the late nineties, but even though he must have stood out being 6'5" tall, Lars Leese's goalkeeping career completely passed me by.
But, as this book explains, Lars Leese had a remarkable career. In his mid twenties he still had not established himself in German football. In 1997, after working his way up through the lower leagues he was at last playing for a big club, Bayer Leverkusen, but he was not the first team goalkeeper, nor was he the first reserve - he was the third choice goalkeeper. Despite this, within a few months he had signed for newly promoted Barnsley and therefore become a Premier League goalkeeper. Although his stint at Barnsley was brief - less than two seasons and only 21 games played - he did have his moments of glory, in particular a game in which Barnsley beat Liverpool 1-0 and Lars Leese was the hero, managing to keep out the Liverpool forwards and thus gaining the respect of the Anfield crowd.
Leese knew that his stay at Barnsley would not last once Barnsley changed managers following Barnsleys relegation and he was proved right. When an opportunity to join Scottish club, Hibs, fell through he found himself back in Germany, where he found it difficult to find another club. This book excellently manages to portray the anguish that Leese must have felt at this time. It was obviously a difficult time for him; months earlier he was starring in the Premier League and now he was finding it hard to find a club that would even give him a trial.
The most memorable chapters though are those that concern his time at Barnsley. His recollections of the players Christmas Party are proper eye-openers. At the one he attended two players were tactfully dressed as Adolf Hitler and Eva Braun and he then tells us that these parties usually degenerated into orgies as the booze would help the players lose any of the few inhibitions that they may have. He also tells us about the time when Barnsley went to Exeter for a pre-season training camp. Predictably this also included a drinking session; Leese couldn't understand why the English players did not visit the toilet every so often to empty their bladders like he did. His discovery why goes a long way towards explaining why at one point he asks `why do English players always act as they are in a kindergarten?'
This book is regularly lauded to be one of the best football books written by one leading monthly football publication. I wouldn't particularly rate it that highly but it is still worth a read to learn about the other, less glamorous, side of football.




