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From is genesis as Newton Heath LYR Football Club founded in 1878 all the way to the global sporting and commercial superpower that it is today, this is the history of Manchester United Football Club as you have never seen it before. Lifelong Red Devils' fan Neville Moir has distilled this extraordinary history into an amusing, fascinating and easy to read anthology. This entertaining volume is an instructive, if sometimes irreverent – but always affectionate – guide to some of the groundbreaking firsts, controversies, innovations, characters, achievements and disasters that have shaped one the greatest sporting institutions on the planet. Whether an expert or a novice, this compendium is perfect for all Man United fans, young and old, around the world.
Sir Alex Ferguson dominated English football for over 26 years. Now, having retired in 2013, Glory, Glory Man Utd pays tribute to the man's remarkable achievements by recounting each of Manchester United's 20 title triumphs from the Edwardian era to the present day and the 13 titles won by Sir Alex during his United reign.
the story of one of the greatest eras in the history of England's greatest club through the eyes of the players who made it happen. Not just the big wins, the cup finals and the trophy parades, but the half-time rows, the mad pranks, the boozy nights out and the training ground bust-ups. Andy Mitten has tracked down ten of the stars from that team - including Eric Cantona, Andrew Cole, Lee Sharpe, and Nicky Butt as well as controversial chairman Martin Edwards - to open the door to both the dressing room and boardroom at Old Trafford in the 1990s.
This almanac gives a match-by-match analysis of the 2002-2003 season, telling how Europe and the Championship unfolded for players and fans. It also provides a supporters' diary for the 2003-2004 season.
At the age of 33, Emmanuel Upputuru, India’s hottest creative person,* finds himself frustrated by physical injuries that have begun to cage his body. He embarks on a journey of self-discovery that unveils a shocking truth about his very existence: his identity was stolen from him before he ever set foot on this earth. The probe leads him to a scene of robbery and murder in a garden and to a place of skull in Jerusalem, where a war was waged on his behalf by a lamb with a mission to restore his original identity. But what was Emmanuel’s original identity? Are we just our bodies? How do we cope with physical pain? What are the three core fears of mankind? How can we be born again? These are some of the questions Emmanuel seeks to answer in his book, ‘Who Do You Think You Are’. Written over a period of eighteen years, using anecdotes from the advertising and cricket world, Emmanuel offers a radical take on the complex subject of Man’s Identity. ‘Who Do You Think You Are’ is an urgent book for a broken world. It can help us discover our true identity. Armed with this identity we can respond to conflicts better and conquer ourselves even as the world around us continues to trigger, troll, fight, divorce and threaten to nuke itself.
For Lilly and her mother, going to Indonesia isn't just another holiday. It's an escape and a new start. But when Will takes a gentle ride along the beach on an elephant called Oona, calamity strikes. As a tsunami comes crashing towards them, Oona charges deep into the jungle, her young rider desperately clinging on. Miles from civilisation, there's wonder, discovery and treetop adventures among the orang-utans. But then as Lilly's thoughts turn to his mother left behind on the beach, tigers prowl, hunger hits, and she must learn to survive the rainforest. Samuel Adamson's adaptation of Michael Morpurgo's novel Running Wild was premiered by the Chichester Festival Youth Theatre in 2015. It received its professional premiere in May 2016, in a Regent's Park Theatre and Chichester Festival Theatre co-production. Running Wild was winner of Best Show for Children and Young People at the 2015 UK Theatre Awards.