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A musician of rare artistry, the self-effacing yet charismatic
Yo-Yo Ma connects with his audiences with startling effectiveness.
He remains devoted to the classical repertoire yet has long roved
far beyond the Western classical music canon. Despite his real
superstar status and thriving solo career, he has often sought out
musicians outside the classical sphere and collaborated with them
on fascinating recordings. Above all, he is committed to the
ever-evolving musical odyssey of his Silk Road Ensemble, itself
part of a broader Silk Road Project aiming to explore the deep and
varied artistic connections between East and West. Ma's legions of
admirers seek out his musical genius in his recordings. Here they
can become acquainted with the energetic and charming Ma himself
and trace the trajectory of his unique and distinguished
career.
The untold story of the most contested fixture in world football.
Liverpool and Manchester. Two gloriously independent-minded, eclectic, culturally vibrant places. Yet the inhabitants dislike each other with a passion that is visceral. It is a divide that spans generations, across class, gender and ethnicity. And it has grown over the years, largely driven by one thing: football.
The dark, malignant loathing shared by the followers of Liverpool and Manchester United has seeped into every aspect of life in the two cities. Football is not a barometer of disdain, as it is in places like Glasgow or Istanbul or Moscow. In northwest England, it is the engine of animosity.
How did it come to this? Why did things turn so nasty? And what does it say about the two cities in which the clubs are based?
Written by a Scouser and a Manc in a rare collaboration, Red on Red addresses the divide by talking to those involved in ten seminal football matches. It speaks to the characters who patrolled and provoked the rivalry: Alex Ferguson, Kenny Dalglish, Steven Gerrard and Gary Neville, among many others. Also questioned are the fans, the administrators, the referees, the police, and politicians. And through each legendary game, its authors tell the full story of the most extraordinary division not just in football, but in modern Britain.
This is Red on Red, a rivalry like no other.
For three months every year football clubs buy and sell people.
They spend more than £4 billion a year on footballers, and for
good reason; the right deal can help you win the game's top prizes
while the wrong deal can cost you your job and bankrupt your club.
It is a fast-paced, at times murky and cutthroat world worth
billions, which largely operated behind closed doors - until Jim
White and Kaveh Solhekol stepped in, that is. In Deadline Day, Jim
and Kaveh, two of the world's leading transfer experts, take us
behind the scenes of this uniquely tense, make-or-break element to
the game. They talk of the world's most famous players, managers
and agents - Jose Mourinho, Sir Alex Ferguson and Pep Guardiola
amongst others - to get to the heart of the most significant deals
in history, as well as the ones that got away. But has the time
come for football to slam shut the transfer window for good? Is it,
after all, more scandal than strategy? Perceptive, entertaining and
dynamically told, Jim and Kaveh reckon with questions integral to
the future of the game in this definitive, never-before-told inside
story of football's transfer window.
A MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH takes the sayings of the great and the
good - not to mention the lovers and the loathers - of the
beautiful game as starting points for an informal, freewheeling and
entertainingly opinionated history of football. Exploring themes as
diverse as the language of football, the role of the media, the
role of money, and the careers of gilded geniuses from Pele to
Ronaldo and maverick managers from Clough to Mourinho, and
generously sprinkled with anecdotes and fantastic photographs, A
MATTER OF LIFE AND DEATH is the perfect present for anyone with a
passion for football.
Stress is part and parcel of life. We all get it. Think of blood
pressure. If you are alive, you have blood pressure. If you are
alive, you have stress. If your blood pressure gets too high, you
should do something about it. The same is true with stress and this
book will help you to control it. Stress can be a mixture of
anxiety, depression, panic feelings, poor sleep, low
self-confidence, low self-esteem and a poor sense of wellbeing. It
is one of the most common problems in the world today. But
controlling your stress doesn't have to mean expensive therapy or a
long waiting list for a referral to a service. This book will teach
you to become your own therapist: * Learn about stress and how it
affects you * Follow straight-forward steps to get an instant sense
of control * Develop a set of linked skills for long-term stress
management * Boost your wellbeing * Feel in control of your future
This accessible, jargon-free book combines clinically proven
methods from cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), positive
psychology and mindfulness to give you the tools you need to
improve your mind, your body and your life.
Manchester United:The Biography will do for the football team what
Peter Ackroyd did for London in his huge biog of the same name. The
book follows the club's extraordinary journey from its birth in the
railway works of Newton Heath to its current status as Premier
League and European champions. The key stages in United's history
will, of course, be covered: the Munich Air Crash of 1958, which
saw the best part of an entire team (the Busby Babes) being killed;
becoming the first English team to win the European Cup in 1968
(with Bobby Charlton and George Best); the dominance of the club in
the Premiership; the controversial sale to American tycoon Malcolm
Glazer, right up to Moscow 2008. But by drawing on the
recollections of everyone from players and managers to fans and
backroom staff, Jim has unearthed enough new material to interest
die-hard fans and casual supporters alike. A fascinating history of
a remarkable football club, by one of Britain's best-known and most
popular sports writers.
On Sunday 5 October 2014, the 75,000 strong crowd at Old Trafford
for Manchester United's game against Everton joined in with an
extended version of a chant which echoed around the stadium. 'We
all live in a Georgie Best world,' it went. Eleven years after his
death, forty years after he walked out of the club for the last
time as a player, Best remains a Giant - extraordinary given that
his star shone for such a brief time. He was at the top of the game
for no more than half a dozen years. How did he do it?
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