
Bloodland
Book
A private security contractor loses it in the Congo, with deadly consequences, while in Ireland the...

Mystify the Magician (Everworld #11)
Book
Christopher, Jalil, April, David, and Senna thought they’d seen it all. Especially after...

Garmin 64S Handheld
Tech Watch
2.6 inch sunlight-readable colour screen and high-sensitivity GPS and GLONASS receiver with quad...

The Mersey Girls
Book
Spring 1913, and seventeen-year-old Evie Murphy is leaving her native Ireland for the city of...
Now - Gunshots & Goalposts: The Story of Northern Irish Football - the book that covers the stories of many football players in the past century in Northern Ireland.
While it covers so many stories, I wasn’t able to connect to any of the characters, and I choose to blame this on the way the book was written.
Which - is not a bad thing at all. Why? Because, this book is not meant to make you fall in love with the characters. It is instead, meant to show you the real picture of their lives, the politics that were ongoing in that time, and give you a brief history lesson of what you happened to miss in high school. All related to football, of course.
For me, it was very useful to learn a bit about the politics and history. Before I started the book, I knew NOTHING about Northern Ireland’s history. I knew NOTHING about their football history. This was a great first book for me to dive into the waters of the history of Northern Ireland's football.
The author, Benjamin Roberts, has done a wonderful job in the description and research. It covers a lot of the history period from the First and Second World War, the protestants vs catholics, the unionists vs nationalists, the east vs the west.
This book reminds me a lot of a movie that has been made in the country where I was born - Macedonia. The movie was called ‘’The Third Half’’ and deals with Macedonian Football during World War II, and the deportation of Jews from Macedonia. It reminded me a bit of this, even though in this book we don’t connect with the characters, or dive into their stories too much.
This is a three-star book for me - for the sole reason that this is not a book that I would usually read, and I wouldn’t read books similar to this one either. I enjoyed it, at times, but wouldn’t re-read it. However, I would definitely recommend it to people that love both football and history. I just prefer books where I connect with the characters.

Anaesthesia
Education and Magazines & Newspapers
App
A leading anaesthesia journal is now available on your iPad and iPhone. Fresh from the Newsstand,...

IrishSpeedTraps
Travel and Navigation
App
NO MONTHLY OR ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION REQUIRED! NO RECURRING CHARGES! Unlike other speed camera iPhone...

The Men Will Talk to Me: Mayo Interviews by Ernie O'Malley
Cormac O'Malley and Vincent Keane
Book
In the 1940s and 1950s Ernie O'Malley travelled around Ireland interviewing survivors of Ireland's...

Thomas MacDonagh: 16Lives
Book
Born in Cloughjordan in Co. Tipperary, MacDonagh was a poet and playwright, an educator and...

Conversations with My Father - Jack Kyle
Book
Jack Kyle was the rugby giant of his time, but he is also so much more than a sporting legend....