Others say...

"The world in 90 minutes--and a great read to boot!"
My only real complaint about this one is the title, and it's hard to hold such a thing against the author since authors often don't title their own works. Foer does an admirable job using soccer to expand on such topics as the inherent racism of the European game, the effects of globalization that has weakened the Brazilian leagues into a feeder for the "real" clubs in the work, and a primer on the Italian game and why they dive so *(@#&$*(#@ much. The book is a quick read and gives exactly as much information as needed to catch many of the nuances of complex systems. Worth a read even if you're not a footy fan.

"i haven't finished, but its tough to"
This book is difficult to start. I think the idea is interesting but I'm really having trouble picking this book up and reading it. I'm not the only one with that complaint either. Hopefully it gets better.

"A Near-Perfect Introduction to the Culture of a Perfect Sport"
I had heard mutterings about this "collection of essays", as others have put it, starting roughly when this particular edition hit the shelves. For whatever reason, I didn't pick it up until I was in a small bookstore in Portland, Maine. Had my party not been dawdling in the shop's vicinity for so long, I doubt I would've given the book more than a glance. To satisfy my own curiosity, however, I sat down with a copy and rifled through the pages.

I was searching for a theme I (correctly) assumed would have been awarded a chapter: the epic Celtic-Rangers rivalry. As an Irishman and positively rabid Celtic supporter myself, I hoped the section would prove an adequate example in my efforts to explain my love for the club, hatred for our rivals, the overall premise of the conflict and some of the underlying justifications as to why the particular rivalry is so rancorous. I was generally satisfied with the chapter as I believed it would help my father's understanding to be exposed to the views of an impartial observer, in this case Mr. Foer. Of course I maintain the expected gripes a Celtic supporter would have with a relatively objective study of the Old Firm rivalry, most notably the absence of a commentary describing the Celtic fan base's passion as proud Irish/Catholic nationalism and that of Rangers as an exercise in pure hatred of an ideological and ethnic minority. Other than that, however, the only issue of note I have with Franklin Foer's examination of sport and globalization is that many of the chapters left my appetite of historical curiosity unsatiated.

The first chapter, highlighting the awesomely vehement Serb nationalism and dark history surrounding the club Red Star Belgrade, had me certifiably enthralled. When I turned the final page of the essay, I found myself wishing that the entire book had been devoted to chronicling the histories of Red Star Belgrade and FK Obilic and their roles in the Balkan Wars and ethnic cleansing campaigns, and further examination of the criminality embedded in the ownership of the two clubs.

Predictably, I felt similar feelings in regards to the chapter on sectarianism in football, which used the Old Firm as a case study. I wanted to argue with Mr. Foer that he, while trying valiantly, failed to scratch below the surface of the staggeringly complex situation by lending most of his studious efforts to observing the Rangers point of view. At the risk of sounding subjective, I think he gave the club a bit too much credit in terms of honor while simultaneously neglecting to illustrate the Celtic spirit of pride and overcoming adversity. I also think that the author didn't employ the best examples to evince his explanatory intentions. I would be remiss if I didn't say that this happened rarely, and when it did, such as in the case of using FC Barcelona's Bulgarian striker Hristo Stoichkov to show the inherited nationalism some foreign players possess when they play for a side with strong ties to a particular ethnic minority (Celtic's Polish goalkeeper Artur Boruc would have been an equally acceptable, if not superior, example, though it has to be said the book was written before Boruc went to Celtic), Mr. Foer was still able to articulate his point clearly.

While I was disappointed in the lack of explanatory depth in some of Franklin Foer's odysseys, I can both appreciate and champion his adeptness in the art of being succinct. World football is a forum in which one can draw an infinite number of parallels to an infinite number of topics, and the author did a stellar job of hand-picking and articulating real-world examples to illustrate his various points, which are conveniently broken into chapters. I consider myself a mild authority on both the sport of football and its connections to unique non-sport situations around the world, and I certainly went away from this work with new knowledge. While the book in some ways lacks a thesis, it introduces a universality of football that knowing the game's rules and history cannot: the unique links the sport has with the many different breeds of people who love it. Foer writes with wit and wisdom, and newcomers to the sport will be presented with a new understanding of the culture of the game, while lifelong die-hard fans like myself will learn idiosyncrasies of various world cultures' connections to it.

"Fun, Fascinating. "
This guy has such interesting insights. The writing is just random enough to keep you always interested, but still packs in real info to help understand cultures around the world and the world of football / soccer.

"Biggest disappointment in a book ever."
This was, by far, the most disappointed I've ever been in a book. It's probably my own fault, but I was expecting stories of the cultural importance of soccer/football in different parts of the world. Instead, I feel I've gotten a poorly written set of stories about psychotic fans/owners/players, etc that take the game too far. So much so, in fact, that I'm afraid to go to a game overseas ever for fear that it's either fixed or that I'll be beat up for no apparent reason other than the fact I'm there.

To be fair, I don't think of politics a lot, so that doesn't interest me as much, but even the writing was sub-par. Many of the chapters ended as if the writer just ran out of things to say.

Very disappointed.

 

Buy Cheap Software Now!
  How Soccer Explains the World : An Unlikely Theory of Globalization

List Price : $24.95
Our Price : from $17.41




Special offer for you..find the cheapest!
TSCBOOKS offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Price : $17.41
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
bordeebook offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Price : $17.42
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
vana11 offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Price : $17.52
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
woodys-books offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Price : $17.54
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
BestBookDepot offers this stuff with condition New, new for:
Price : $17.56
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
adiscounts4u from GA, United States offers this stuff for:
Price : $20.35
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
cbb_books from CA, United States offers this stuff for:
Price : $28.00
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
bigworldbooks from MI, United States offers this stuff for:
Price : $29.99
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
bluehouse100 from MA, United States offers this stuff for:
Price : $30.91
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
What our customer's say!

"this BOOK should be "relegated" (hope you know the term)", I could write another BOOK as to why this tome should NEVER have been written.
For all those who understand my title caption of the review,no more needs to say. For the USian uninitiated to world football, you can look up the concept of 'relegation' on internet, no problem and you will understand what I mean by this title.

1st , a side note, if you really want an educated and informed story of the HISTORY of futebol* (*fútbol, calcio, fussball....PLEASE no call it 'soccer', hahahahaha!), read the englishman David Goldblatt's remarkable book "the Ball is Round" (or as we say , "A bola é redonda"!).

Em Breve, Mr Foer is a newcomer to the beautiful game, and has NO historical background for it.

Mr Foer writing a book on futebol can only be equalled as a supremo absurdo , if , por ex. Madonna (the singer) wrote a book on Cabala (Jewish numerical mysticisms that she experimented , and well documented by the USA "news" media, ih!!).

Or Michael jackson writing a manual on, say " how to romance women in ten easy (moonwalk) steps" would be another humorous(?) way to view this ???

Either way, Mr Foer has not the background , even with the research he did (and I commend him for that), he has no "muscle memory" regarding great moments of futebol both distant and recent past.


How can he describe how ,ex.~ in 1982 , Rossi's THREE gols destroyed one of the best seleção brasil even appeared on a pitch, what it meant to Rossi personally in his life,italia and brasil em geral...How can he know, futebol did not even exist for him in 1993, alone 1982!

He can research it, but can he feel this in his bones , not only as an italian or brasilian can, but almost ANY longtime football fanzaço do/did?? I am STILL torn between my admiration for the seleção and my beloved Azzurri of the impact of Rossi's momentary brilliant light that Copa!

NO, because he is from USA where futebol is STILL out of favour, even if milliards and milliards of immigrants and children of soccer moms play futebol daily at their neighborhood pitch, the sport gets minimal press, and is denigrated regualr basis by these sportstalks show idiotas, more/less!

A note-- Mr Foer is editor of a center-right journal in USA.

I had hoped this would have minimal influence on his "new love for the game" when he writes this book (which for reason unknown, is found in the POLITICAL SCIENCE section of local book stores!!!???)

,That this book is in the Poli Science section seems to denegrate political science discourse, as Mr Foer's book is a "lightweight" and more belongs to ficcion than poli-sciences.

Mr Foer's futebol "worldview" seems to be that of a partisan right winger/ super patriot (pun intended, obvious I mean his political preference), and this premeates the book perspective.



The first chapter, he rehashes what he has READ from futebol books written in Engleesh,after this "lesson" about futebol, he is to make right wing politics out of each passing chapter, including a chapter where he berates "soccer moms" as being "left wing" and goes on the attack! (??)

Personally,it seems that most USian "mammas" become very CONSERVATIVE after having children, and I make a guess more than a few these women voted BUSH as for the "opposition", no??

(I think there is even a study-report that "liberal" people become more conservative in USA once with child/children, no??)

If I remember, and I believe it so as it got me quite angry at time I read this book, Mr.Foer also attacks liberal parents in the book,I not impressed by that at all to publish derogatory comments about one's famiglia.

Sad sad, as I see it.

Again, Mr Goldblatt's book is poesia (or romantic prosa), a loving and THOROUGH history of the beautiful game as well as very non partisan overview of the world as applies to each country he "visits".

Mr Foer's book, sacanagem puro!

He cannot possible show how "soccer explains the world", futebol does NOT "explain" the world, but is an integral part of it (as , again, Mr Goldblatt's wonderful book indicates).



To sum, Mt Foer has an axe to grind, I have seen some of his political writing, and it is even worse than what is contained in this book.
As David Zirin has written, Mr Foer seems a proponent of the Freidman school of globalisation, and this is BAD BAD for everyone on the planeta, save the few elitistas in USA who profit from this arrangement.

In Italian football terms, this book is barely "C-2" division as a football book, as a political book, it not worth to use the pages to wrap fishbones..


To be charitable for Mr Foer's entusiasms for the world game,and a passable first chapter for all USian football "new boots", I allow the one star to be kind for a ZERO stars offering

o mundo gira é a bola rola

PS in the spriti of full disclosure, Eduardo Galeano's delightful (an partisan, so call me a hipocrite!) football book is translated inglés, "Football in Sun and shadow" , and takes a delightful PROGRESSIVE worldview, and of course,

Sinhô Galeano is an 'aplicado discipulo' of the world game since a boy in uruguai. A MUCH better choice also than this book, a "classic" of futebol literature.




"Foer makes a huge stretch; still and interesting read", _How Soccer Explains the World_ is an unfortunately misleading title; rather than explain the world, Foer uses soccer as a metaphor for globalization and the various reactions of parts of the world to it. He is only partially successful in this.

Evidentially the opposite of globalism isn't nationalism, but what Foer referrs to as "tribalism", as demonstrated by English (and Serbian) "soccer hooligans." How this has developed and been used by the likes of Slobodan Milosevic was an interesting premise, if a bit of a stretch. The global recruitment of soccer players - Nigerians playing for Ukraine, Brazilians playing for anybody, Dutch coaches working in the Near East - are cited as evidence of how soccer has become a "global marketplace" - with mixed results. The metaphor fits on one level (yes, it IS global - how 'bout that?) but fails horribly on another. (How can one make generalizations about the way a "nation" plays soccer?)

Foer also goes into great detail about the politics of the sport - I think he was on to something here, but the idea was only one of several that he persued, to its detriment. (In addition to the "national styles" of coaching and playing, Foer also discussed the sociology of the sport and its appeal - or lack of - in the United States, and its role as a social safety valve in Spain and Iran.) His would have been a stronger case had he pursued only one idea, rather than several.

As a soccer fan, I enjoyed his detailing the stadiums, the chants between rival teams, and (especially) his thoughts on soccer in America. Given his thesis, though, it only warrants 3 stars. An interesting book and there is much to like here - but the central idea, sadly, is very thin.

"how soccer explains the world", This was a well written book regarding soccer in the global community. I would encourage anyone who enjoys the game to read this interesting perspective on how soccer is influenced by religion and race and vice versa.

"A Book Not Yet Written", Franklin Foer is definitely onto something. Indeed soccer might ultimately explain the world. Unfortunately the National Best Seller he has written, "How Soccer Explains the World", does not. Yet Foer is a good writer. His chapters are nice introductory essays on the culture of soccer in it's many forms throughout the world. He stops well short of linking the many disparate aspects of multi-cultural supporter rivalry, prejudice, and greed into why the beautiful game is, in fact, such a phenomenon throughout the world. Soccer fans will enjoy this book for the insight into leagues they do not follow and for some historical trivia. Others might enjoy it just so that can laugh at the absolute freaks who show up to support their passion and sadly for the crimes against humanity committed in its name. But he does not explain, to the uninitiated, why soccer is the world wide beautiful game. Those of us who play or follow the sport, might think we know how soccer explains the world because we live it, it's a part of our lives, we feel it everyday. But the same is true for any other passionate human endeavor. If you are passionate about it, it is the undisputed answer to the world and holds the key to the meaning of life -- serious stuff. So a book claiming to actually know why, not just locally but globally, must stand up to it's title. There's a lot of competition out there and Foer fails to bring anything else to the table for a comparison -- but he could. Further, he does not link the fundamental building blocks of society into the game -- he touches on them, but does not link them into society -- I guess that's because he is an economist and not a sociologist or a theologist. However as an economist he really misses the big business that is soccer. Without a chapter devoted to the business of soccer he has ignored a very important link. If soccer explains the world than FIFA must be running the world, for example. There is no chapter on FIFA. And if soccer is akin to religion, while he did write a chapter about the King, he failed to mention God. Where is Diego Maradona? And if soccer is a social building block -- while he does mention yuppies in America, where soccer is the least stringent of societal glue, he does not mention the societies where soccer is one of the very few but incredibly binding influences. So to recap -- no elements of the beautiful game itself, no comparisons to other global influences, and no expansion into other phenomenon directly attributable to a functioning society. Foer wrote some nice essays after taking the opportunity to travel the world. I am envious to say the least. But he failed miserably to live up to the title of the book. Perhaps he should write a sequel and call it -- "How Soccer Really Explains the World". For now we must continue to wait for the explanation of what we already know.

"A different way of looking at thing", Overall a pretty interesting look at the world. The author looks at how different countries treat soccer, and what that says about their culture. Due to the fact that soccer is a pretty much universal sport, it does act as an interesting way to compare cultures. In fact one could make the argument that he actually leaves a lot of material on the table in examining cultures and economies through sport.

My biggest complaint is that it often becomes way too travel essay like. I am glad he likes the game and all, but frankly his enjoyment of the sport isn't interesting enough, I had never even heard of the author previously. Stick to the game.



 
You might need this...

Fever Pitch
details..
 

Soccer Against the Enemy: How the World's Most Popular Sport Starts and Fuels Revolutions and Keeps Dictators in Power
details..
 

Soccer in Sun and Shadow, New Edition
details..
 

The Thinking Fan's Guide to the World Cup
details..
 

The Ball is Round: A Global History of Soccer
details..
 
Read this reviews before You buy...

"A great read", A great book that displays the link between soccer and culture. Sport, and its relevence to history is reflected on every page of this book. Truly a great read for those of us who like to see "the big picture" of sport, how it is influenced by, and how it influences, society

"How Soccer Explains the World", My 16 year old son lit up when he saw this book under the tree at Christmas (pretty good for a child who would rather do anything but read)...He is reading daily and absolutely loves it!!!! He has a list of friends and coaches waiting to read it next. A great find for any soccer player or athlete....

"There is more to soccer than meets the eye", It looks like a pure and simple game but the owners, fans and players are far from simple and certainly not pure. This book may not explain as much about the world as the author claims but I doubt you will not come to view various soccer matches a bit differently. For example, you might start watching the referee's decisions in Milan and Juventus matchs like a hawk.


"Promises More than it Delivers", This book ain't bad; it just promises more than it delivers. Soccer is "the game" everywhere but the United States. Over the last 30 years, though, the sport has made enormous gains in the USA, but it still trails football, basketball, and (probably) baseball in popularity, but it is no longer a foreign sport. Franklin Foer of "The New Republic" promises to offer a theory on globalization through an examination of soccer, and that is certainly a new, creative way of looking at sport. At first, he seems to be doing this. In his prologue, he states, "Everywhere you looked, it suddenly seemed, national borders and national identities had been swept into the dustbin of soccer history. the best clubs now competed against one another on a near-weekly basis in transnational tournaments like the European Champions League or Latin America's Copa Libertadores" (p. 3) Instead of getting a window on the cross-currents of international interaction, we mainly get a series of travelogues, interesting travelogues to be sure, but nothing along the lines of what the author promises. He has a moment at the end, though, when he talks about anti-soccer sentiment in the United States as being a manifestation of a phobia about globalization.

"a fun read", I really enjoyed going through this book. Whie I wouldn't say that it's in any way definitive, nor that I completely agree with everything, his points were well put forth and argued. And it made me think. For Americans, it's a must read to see why the rest of the world cares so much about the game and we care so little. Pick this up and explore the world of football.


 
 
 

All the software listed in this directory are shareware and commercial software. There are no free software here. We have many utilities which run on windows, mac / macintosh, linux and unix. As one of the download directory in internet we have many software and application. All of our applications / app are downloadable for your computer. We also have shareware, demo, osx, linux, xp, windows, 95, 98, 2000, win, winfiles program file. The extension of files may vary, it can zip, exe, jpg and many more. We don't support illegal software like hack, crack and serial number. No hacking and cracking.

Online PAD Generator / Download Site / Term Of Use / Privacy Policy / Disclaimer

 
 

Copyright ? 2004-2008. Shareware Download, Files Download. All Rights Reserved.