Product Details
The Meaning of Sport

The Meaning of Sport
By Simon Barnes

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Product Description

In The Meaning of Sport, award winning sports writer Simon
Barnes gives you his grandstand seat for a journey from the Olympic Games
in Athens to the World Cup in Germany – via the Ashes series, the Ryder
Cup, Wimbledon, and more. He examines why sport holds us all in such
thrall, how it uplifts and crushes us – and can seem to matter more than
life itself. He challenges us to recognise the intelligence of Wayne
Rooney, the making of Freddie Flintoff, the mythic nature of Steve
Redgrave; and he ponders the ultimate cruelty of the game.

This is the book which asks the questions no one else has thought of,
and finds some surprising answers. Sport has never been written about like
this before.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13343 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-08-02
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Patrick Collins, Mail on Sunday, December 2006
"A celebration of sport and life by one of the finest
sportswriters of his
generation - wise, perceptive and unfailingly joyful"

Leo McKinstry, Sunday Telegraph, December 2006
"...thought-provoking in its content, wonderfully humorous and
readable in its style, this is a sports book like no other."

Michael Atherton, Cricketer, December 2006
"His book is a delight: full of wisdom, humour and whimsy..."


Customer Reviews

Homer, Dostoyevksy, Proust, Bob Dylan, and even Morecambe and Wise - all life is here.3
Sometimes the Amazon star rating simply doesn't do a book justice. For me, The Meaning of Sport is a ***. But it's so much more. And less.

You'll find numerous references to Homer, Dostoyevksy, Proust, James Joyce, Bob Dylan, and even Morecambe and Wise. Often these literary and cultural metaphors, alongside his many allusions to birdlife, work wonderfully. But sometimes, rather than establishing the book's "intellectual" credentials, one suspects the author is imploring "it's ok! I've got a life, I'm not one of those fools who is obsessed by sport and has no other interests!".

It is a deeply introspective book, with much on the nature of being a sportswriter, as opposed to a sportsman. As a "chief" sportswriter Barnes knows how to delight and provoke his audience, so for example, if you're a fan of gymnastics you'll love his eulogies to the sport of flight. Boxing fans however might not much appreciate his "philosophical" objections to the sport he describes as a "death duel", and golfers will have fight past multiple "blazer" and "sports you can smoke while playing" cliches.

Honestly - one minute I loved it - *****, and the next minute I was infuriated by it - *. So I plumped for ***. But I'm very glad I read it.

Oh dear2
Like another reviewer, I often buy The Times for the sole purpose of reading Simon Barnes. I have always defended him sub-consciously whenever he makes his regular appearances in Private Eye's Pseuds Corner. But this book really is laughably self-indulgent.

It's not so much the regular name-dropping of Proust, Joyce etc. regardless of the authors' relevance to the topic in hand, nor the torturous, repetitive, paradoxical paragraphs about "will" and "greatness". What really drove me to despair is the author's apparent belief that his job - the mundane technicalities as well as the pseudo-philosophical babbling about being a "teller of tales" - is as fascinating as the stars he covers.

"Destiny," he declares on page 138, apparently without irony, when he is given a job as a sportswriter on the Surrey Mirror. I finally gave up two pages later when he started plugging his earlier books while regretting, "I have not established myself as a novelist".

A great shame. A collection of his Times' columns would have been altogether more readable.

Great insight, good book.4
I often buy the Times for little more than Barnes's erudite view on the week's sporting triviality,give or take a Martin Samuel rant. Anyone who empathises with this will end up reading a fascinating and illuminating book; that is my ultimate opinion.
Yet Barnes, someone so consumed with greatness and the stories which document the quest for greatness, may himself have fallen short. His views on the learned elite and their refusal to acknowledge the necessity of sport is often contradicted by his self-promotion as the last of the great intellectuals - it makes its reading too much like watching David Brent. People were intrigued by Mourinho's special one premise a few years back when he told Abramovich the only superstar Chelsea needed was him. Now it is little more than pathetic when it is all we hear (as Barnes brilliantly summarised in the Times only this week - end of Dec 2006). Maybe Barnes is the same. Maybe if I were reading him once a day, one chapter at a time like I normally do I wouldn't feel irritated, I wouldn't be deriding a man whose quality is unarguable. Alas, the book's downfall is in its quality. Like John Terry who couldn't miss a game, even when carrying injury, I couldn't put this book down, even when it needed to be.
Barnes has written an awesome book, just not a great one.