I loved the first book in the English Sombrero series, where
we met the brash but lovable character of Don Simmons. There he set himself the
seemingly unattainable task of running the marathon. Here he buys, after a
rather large windfall, a struggling non-league football club. Armed with a
squad of semi-professional no hopers he sets out to win the FA cup; the highest
price in English football. You have to love and admire Don as he sets about
building a winning squad, deals with the press and the football authorities.
Don is a self-made man who does things in his own way, which wins him as many
friends as enemies. I still found this book hugely entertaining and some of the
problem solving inspired. Where it lost me a little was that it was just a bit
too beyond the realms of possibilities and that a lot of the problems were
solved by just throwing huge amounts of money at it. Would I read the third
book if it was released? I probably would and if the writer is in the process,
I’d say to make it more about personal struggle and less about the money. Well written
and great fun, especially if you like English football.
Writing the books was the easy part....now the struggle to let the world know they're there....
Wednesday, 14 March 2018
The English Sombrero: The Little White Ball by Doug Goddard and Anthony Randall
It's been a while since I've read the fist book in the series; Nothing to do but run. But it certainly was a book that stayed on my mind and I wanted to go back to. Second books are always difficult, the writing in the follow up was good and the dialogue funny, but I found myself a bit less engaged with the story. Maybe because I'm not a mad football fan and used to run myself. Maybe it was a dislike for people throwing money about. Anyhoo a 4 star plus.
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