The Damned Utd
|
| List Price: | £7.99 |
| Price: | £3.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
138 new or used available from £0.01
Average customer review:Product Description
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 ageing 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 characterised by fear of failure and hunger for success set in the bleak heart of the 1970s.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1765 in Books
- Published on: 2007-04-05
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 368 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"'The most extraordinary novel about football yet to appear.' Tim Martin, Independent on Sunday"
Observer
'The book that brought the legend back to life.'
Independent on Sunday
'The most extraordinary novel about football yet to appear.'
Customer Reviews
Exhilarating, one of the most spectacular books you will read this year
"Gentlemen, I might as well tell you now. You lot may have won all the domestic honours there are and some of the European ones but, as far as I'm concerned, the first thing you can do for me is chuck all your meddles and all your caps and all your pots and all your pans into the biggest f***ing dustbin you can find, because you've never won any of them fairly. You've done it all by bl**ding cheating."
In 1974, Brian Clough, the man, the enigma, the genius, took over the helm as manager of Leeds United, a club he very publicly despised. He was to last only 44 days. 44 days during which he barely spoke to the players, took an axe to his predecessor Don Revie's desk, saw his captain sent off for fighting with Kevin Keegan in the Charity Shield at Wembley, and won only one competitive game.
This is the fictionalisation of those catastrophic days, interspersed with Cloughie's early days in management: from Hartlepools in the third division to Derby County, the First Division Championship and a European Cup Semi-Final. In these happier days there are startling achievements and the beginning of a legend: the national acclaim, the players at Derby willing to go on strike to have him re-instated as manager, the hard work and the spending. But in the backdrop Cloughie's demons lurk: the alcohol and the paranoia, the determination and the arrogance; the obsession and the tragedy. In focusing the story directly on Clough himself, David Peace is able to recreate the claustrophobic paranoia and desperation of the man himself; through detailed research he has created a novel which brings back to life a legend the like of whom will not be seen again.
`The Damned UTD' is a superb evocation of football in the 1960's and 1970's, and a brilliant recreation of one of the most controversial managers of all time. When you finish reading this you will come away from it feeling closer to Clough than ever before. But you can never really know him, he is too complex and unfathomable for that. He does not come out of the book well, but then neither does anyone, this is a bleak portrayal of football in the 1970's, as hooliganism increases and the gentleman's code flies out the window. For someone like me who barely remembers football before the Premiership it was an absolute pleasure to travel back into a different age, to watch a man run a football club in a way that would be absolutely unimaginable today. But it was those idiosyncrasies which made Cloughie the manager he was, and at the end of the day you can only judge him by his record: 2 League Championships with sides he got promoted from the second tier, two European Championships, not to mention a few League Cups along the way. And he did it all in style. Like many thousands of people before me, I fell in love with Cloughie.
Rarely, if ever, do sports books make waves in literary circles but `The Damned UTD' has received unanimous acclaim by critics and public alike. Rarely are fictionalised accounts of real events able to recreate the atmosphere and personalities of those involved, but this one does, and does it so well that you often feel you are reading Cloughie's own private diary. Rarely do books written in the second person narrative work but here it is an inspired decision which helps build the claustrophobic paranoia as Brian Clough begins to crack up. David Peace has written one of the best books of the year. And in doing so he has proved that fiction, well researched and well written, is more adroit at recreating the past than any biography or history book ever could.
Read this book, you will not be disappointed.
David Peace at his best
First and foremost - this is not a football book. It's a novel that is about football in general and Brian Clough in particular - but it is definitely in the literary fiction genre.
David Peace has written five previous novels and he takes his central themes - sleaze, corruption, Yorkshire, class conflict, man management - in a new direction in this fictionalization of the early career of Brian Clough.
Nobody comes out well. Not the players, not the Boards, not the clubs and certainly not Brian Clough. Cloughie is portrayed as a dogmatic, confrontational and deceitful man, bent on gaining power and money at any cost. This is put into relief through the interior monologue in Cloughie's head. Peace revisits the use of repetition and mantra to bring out the paranoia - a style that he has already made his own. The pace is breathless and, as with the award-winning GB84 (Peace's award winning portrayal of the miners' strike), the inevitable end is still eagerly awaited.
The themes of alcohol and bungs are still grabbing the headlines today. But what The Damned Utd brought to life for me was the politicking of a football club. In public, clubs and teams are portrayed as matey, friendly organizations united in their struggle against their opponents. Here, we see the divisions within dressing rooms and boardrooms. We see football clubs as companies with structures and administration and rules. We see the role played by coaches and assistants. We see the backstabbing and betrayal. We see the glue that holds it all together. And the manager seems to be some way down in the pecking order, even a manager is as grand as Cloughie.
I guess most people who read the novel will have an interest in football - and probably some personal interest in Leeds Utd, Derby County or Brian Clough. But there is so much more to this astonishing novel. [...] You really just need an interest in human spirit at its very worst.
Don't let literary style put you off
At first glance Peace's choice of the seemingly unlikely
world of 1970's football to set a novel in seems strange. In fact the story of Brian
Clough's 44 days at Leeds United has everything required for a good story- corporate
intrigue, bitterness between work colleagues and an alcoholic anti-hero with
a rags to riches story.
The narrative has two alternating strands - Clough's description of the 44
days at Leeds and the story of his time in football management from his
the premature end of his playing career to taking the Leeds manager's job.
At first I didn't find this appealing but as the book progresses this style makes it clear
that his seemingly bizarre actions as Leeds manager had their roots in the attitudes
he had developed and events that had happened in his life and career
to that point such as his dismissal from Derby. It was the same actions, beliefs and events that made his premature departure from Leeds inevitable.
The constant repetition of certain phrases of Clough's internal monologue along with bizarre behaviour (e.g. burning the desk in his predecessors office) hint at a man close to the edge of sanity and knee deep in paranoia. The shadow of the hated previous Leeds manager (Don Revie) fills Clough's thoughts as he aims to completely change the style of play that had made Leeds so successful and so unpopular.
The senior Leeds players engineer his dismissal for this very reason. Clough was unwilling to give Revie or the players any credit, convinced that any success had been achieved through cheating and other underhand tactics. He appears only occasionally at training, then usually to abuse the players. At the same time he tries half heartedly to be friends with senior players such as Billy Bremner. From the start they make it clear they have no respect for him either.
Leeds and Clough was clearly a marriage made in hell. Clough's greatest success was taking Derby to the title from the second division, with considerable help from the player scouting talents of assistant manger Peter Taylor. Without Taylor at Leeds and with a ready made team he seems unable to cope. Back with Taylor again at Nottingham Forest he again builds a team from scratch and takes it to League and European glory. On this basis you wonder if would have been as good an England manager as he is often tipped to have been.
A knowledge of 70's English football is a help but definitely not essential to enjoy this book. For a reader more used to reading humdrum football autobiographies the writing style will probably seem a little wordy but as the book goes on the fascinating story will help you to forget this.




