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Tom Connolly's journey into non-league football unearthed something
bigger than sport. The result is a collection of stunning
photographs recording the lives lived on the perimeter of the
pitch. For anyone who craves fairness in life and wants fairness in
sport, modern elite football offers a confusing, love-hate
relationship, one which sent Tom Connolly in search of the game he
had fallen in love with as a boy. Like many of the men and women he
met on the non-league terraces, he found it in grassroots football.
Football fans have always been fair game for vilification and
stereotyping. This book is about the human beings to be found in
the beautiful game. Telling its story through a collection of
remarkable black-and-white and colour photos of the people who make
the game what it is, FAIR GAME reminds us that in community-minded
non-league football clubs, the heart and soul of sport is alive and
well, against all the odds and despite those running and owning the
upper reaches of the game.
Charles S. Sahagian Chief, Electromagnetic Materials Technology
Branch Deputy for Electronic Technology Hanscom AFB, MA 01731 I t
should not be surprising that an event as significant as the
discovery of the laser has had some con comitant impact on other
areas of science and technology, but the extent of the impact was
grossly unpredicted. Upon perusal of this bibliography, devoted to
the subject of laser window and mirror materials, it becomes very
apparent that the effect of the laser on materials R&D has been
enormous. Several hundred papers and reports, representing millions
of dollars of effort, have been promulgated over the past decade;
and as new frequencies, improved tunability, higher power, and
other charac teristics are achieved, we can expect even greater
demands and requirements on the materials com munity. What are some
of the highlights disclosec by this bibliography with regard to
work already ac complished? First, one can note the extensive
investigations into developing new materials while at the same time
improving old ones. Among the latter, alkali halides, for example,
have essentially had a rebirth. I n the past five years more
progress has been achieved in the chemical and structural perfec
tion of this class of materials than in the entire preceding
century. Also carried along in the surge for improved laser
materials have been the alkaline earth fluorides (prime candidates
for 3-to 5-J, Lm ap plications), chalcogenides, semiconductors,
oxides, and others."
Tom Connolly's dazzling second novel is a funny, turbulent, and
heartfelt study of male relationships, and a glorious love letter
to the city of New York.It is April in Manhattan and the destinies
of four very different men are about to collide. Nineteen-year-old
Finn has just arrived in the city with his irrepressible and
volatile girlfriend, Dilly, determined to even the score with his
older brother Jack for abandoning him in the UK in the aftermath of
their parents' deaths. Across town, successful gallery owner Leo
Emerson is haunted by loneliness, unsettled by the contrast between
his life and that of his brother-in-law and oldest friend William,
who is enviably contented in his faith and his marriage.When Finn
wanders into Leo's gallery, a series of unexpected and
interconnected events unfold, changing the lives of all four men,
for better or worse. Leo and William's settled existences are
overturned by events outside of their control, while Jack and
Finn's complex relationship reaches its long overdue
showdown.Beautifully orchestrated and richly comic, Men Like Air
explores the romance and solitude of cosmopolitan life, the
transformative power of art, and the impact we have on one
another's lives - and what happens when the ties that bind us are
tested or broken. It is an intense and uplifting story of growth
and renewal, mapping the complex workings of the human heart across
the streets of New York City.
Tom Connolly joined An Garda Siochana in 1955, following in the
footsteps of his father and grandfather. His early days on the
force were spent in various villages and towns around Ireland,
tracking petty thieves, raiding pubs and patrolling country roads
on his bicycle. Back then, before the dawn of DNA profiling,
policemen relied on local knowledge and intuition - as well as
careful evidence-gathering and interrogation techniques - to make
their cases. Over his forty-year career, Connolly rose to the rank
of Detective Superintendent, working on high-profile thefts,
assaults and murders with the National Technical Bureau. This
fascinating memoir offers an insight into the day-to-day work of
the gardai, and celebrates the courage and dedication of all those
who risk their lives to keep us safe.
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