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£10.67 delivery Thursday, 8 August
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£10.67 delivery Thursday, 8 August
Dispatches from: Amazon Sold by: RaymontRetailLTD
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No Nonsense: The Autobiography Hardcover – 22 Sept. 2016
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length340 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSimon & Schuster UK
- Publication date22 Sept. 2016
- Dimensions16.5 x 2.5 x 24 cm
- ISBN-101471147584
- ISBN-13978-1471147586
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Product description
Review
'The book is brilliant and in many ways as No Nonsense as the title claims' --Matt Lawton, Daily Mail
'Book of revelations: No Nonsense is, to all intents and purposes, Joey Barton: The Director's Cut. Unshackled from the limitations of Twitter's 140 characters, expanded and coloured in with the help of an articulate ghost writer, Michael Calvin. Together they lay waste to the "superficial bollocks" of the modern game' --When Saturday Comes
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster UK; UK ed. edition (22 Sept. 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 340 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1471147584
- ISBN-13 : 978-1471147586
- Dimensions : 16.5 x 2.5 x 24 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 174,490 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 736 in Football Biographies (Books)
- 904 in Football Clubs
- 961 in Ball Games
- Customer reviews:
About the author
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Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings, help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the writing style honest and forthright. They also appreciate the content, describing it as well written, with a good insight into issues and football. Readers also appreciate interesting characters. Opinions are mixed on the plot, with some finding it cracking and others finding it boring.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the content well written, interesting, and intellectual. They also say it's refreshing to read someone acknowledge that they're like the rest of us.
"...The book is both very entertaining - in places being laced with his trademark acerbic wit - and fascinating, as the inner workings of the football..." Read more
"...Barton's opinions and views are intelligent enough and frequently astute,but they are clouded by his acts of savagery ,one of which ended up in him..." Read more
"...A forthright read. Which keep you intrigued! Enjoy if you a cross this book." Read more
"...I found it was a great insight into some of the forces that shaped him, how he hit the lows, his constant struggle to make himself a better person,..." Read more
Customers find the writing style magnificent, coherent, and insightful. They also say the book is well written.
"...Overall the book is extremely well written and shines a light on a troubled professional who has often been dehumanised, not only by his own alcohol-..." Read more
"...There is honesty in abundance, laugh out loud anecdotes, I particularly liked the one about his uncle 'borrowing' a large amount of cash from the..." Read more
"...I was wrong.Barton writes well, with a measured pace that provides pause for assimilation and reflection...." Read more
"...This was different, Joey comes across as very honest, articulate and it is refreshing to read someone acknowledging that like the rest of us he has..." Read more
Customers find the characters interesting.
"Joey Barton is an interesting and controversial character, there is nothing that you have not heard about in the press that appears in the book...." Read more
"...Highly recommend. Very easy character to dislike based on what you read in the press. Don’t let that put you off" Read more
"...Joe has his critics but my word he is a very interesting character and makes one hell of a lot of sense ,hope he gets the..." Read more
"...Some good insights into his deprived upbringing and how his life could have taken a very different path...." Read more
Customers find the humor in the book frank, scary, and funny.
"...There is honesty in abundance, laugh out loud anecdotes, I particularly liked the one about his uncle 'borrowing' a large amount of cash from the..." Read more
"...Very frank, scary and funny. I would highly recommend this book." Read more
"Very entertaining and easy read. Shows a difference side to the one perceived in the media." Read more
"Really good read and a very honest/funny and some times sad biography. Well worth your time. ( I got it on too sale to be honest)." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the plot of the book. Some find it cracking and interesting, while others find it boring and painful to read.
"Not always pleasant to read, and that's the way it should be. Can't always be pretty stories of trophies and goals...." Read more
"5 stars. This book is a cracking read and a Joey is a man to look out for in football management in the future I hope." Read more
"...to portray himself as a wordsmith and deep thinker, but comes across as plain boring...." Read more
"good but for me a bit too long and it got a little boring. around halfway i lost interest and picked it back up again later on" Read more
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The story starts with a visit to an incarcerated friend, who had been sentenced for manslaughter after a brawl, in an opening that could so easily have been the fate of Barton himself. There then follows a deeply personal account of his family life and early surroundings that is not for the faint of heart. In particular, Barton's exposure to violence as a youngster makes for an unsettling read.
He documents his fight to make it as a pro despite being written off early as too small and rejected by his boyhood team, Everton before laying bare his experiences in English and French football. His battle with alcohol and personal demons are explored with increasing self-awareness after his involvement with the Sporting Chance clinic prior to relapsing and suffering the indignity of a prison sentence.
Despite his notoriety, he expresses his desire to tackle his problems head-on with the help of his mentor Pete Kay. His love for his children brings a new perspective, and even empathy.
From the book it is often clear that Barton's passion to win football matches brings himself into conflict with friend and foe alike and he appears to feel almost too responsible at times. In several instances his priority seems to be the good of the team at the expense of personal relationships until those relationships become so sour that breakaway is inevitable. It's an all-or-nothing approach that can be both extremely productive, such as securing QPR's promotion or very destructive.
The book is both very entertaining - in places being laced with his trademark acerbic wit - and fascinating, as the inner workings of the football world are revealed.
Overall the book is extremely well written and shines a light on a troubled professional who has often been dehumanised, not only by his own alcohol-fuelled behaviour, but also by media vampires as George Best and Paul Gascoigne before him.