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Brilliant Orange - The Neurotic Genius of Dutch Soccer (Paperback)
Loot Price: R397
Discovery Miles 3 970
You Save: R27
(6%)
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Brilliant Orange - The Neurotic Genius of Dutch Soccer (Paperback)
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List price R424
Loot Price R397
Discovery Miles 3 970
You Save R27 (6%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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"Brilliant Orange" is a book about Dutch soccer that's not really
about Dutch soccer. It's more about an enigmatic way of thinking
peculiar to a people whose landscape is unrelentingly flat, mostly
below sea level, and who owe their salvation to a boy who plugged a
fractured dike with his little finger. If any one thing, "Brilliant
Orange" is about Dutch space, and a people whose unique conception
of it has led to some of the most enduring art, the weirdest
architecture, and a bizarrely cerebral form of soccer-Total
Football-that led in 1974 to a World Cup finals match with
arch-rival Germany, and continues with its intricacy and oddity to
mystify and delight observers around the world.
""In the hot summer of 1975 Wim van Hanegem was offered the chance
to leave his beloved Feyenoord and join the French club Olympique
Marseilles. . . He couldn't decide what to do. . . So he turned to
his dog: 'We can't decide. It's up to you now. If you want to go to
Marseilles, bark or show me.' For several minutes the dog and Van
Hanegem stared at each other. The dog didn't move. 'OK' said Wim,
'he doesn't want to go. We're staying.""
The cast stretches from anarchists and church painters to rabbis
and skinheads, and of course, to Holland's beloved soccer players,
whose eccentricities are wryly detailed by David Winner through
hilarious anecdotes that call to mind Nick Hornby's "Fever Pitch,"
As idiosyncratic as its subject, quirky and provocative, "Brilliant
Orange" reaches out to the reader from an unsuspected place and
never lets go.
"Occasionally a book comes along that you fall in or out of love
with on the basis of nothing more than the contents page . . .
"Brilliant Orange" is oneof those strangely informative books that
will even entertain those who have little interest in either soccer
or the Netherlands." ("The Economist")
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