From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Brian Lester Glanville (born 24 September 1931)
is a leading English football writer and novelist.
Biography
Glanville has enjoyed a lengthy career, having ghost-written "Cliff Bastin
Remembers", the autobiography of his hero at 19 and a noted
critique of the British style of sportswriting in Encounter magazine in the
late fifties, lamenting the lack of depth compared to the American
style of Red Smith, Damon Runyon or A. J.
Liebling[1]. As a
journalist he spent nearly thirty years as a football correspondent
for The Sunday
Times, to which he is still a contributor, and has
contributed to World Soccer
magazine for over 15 years in print and online; he currently
contributes a weekly column to the website covering a range of
issues. In the 60s and 70s, Glanville was also a member of the jury
which awards the yearly Ballon d'Or France Football (or European Footballer of the Year award. In
addition has also written for The People and recently has contributed
several obituaries of prominent players to The
Guardian.[2]
In addition, his work has been seen in publications such as
Sports
Illustrated[3] and the
New
Statesman[4], and
the prominent American Football
writer Paul
Zimmerman has called him "the greatest football writer of all
time."[5]
He spent much of his career based in Italy and has been seen as one of the leading
authorities on Italian football as a result. Whilst based in both
Florence and Rome, he wrote regularly for the
Italian daily Corriere Dello Sport, as well as occasional
pieces for La
Stampa and Corriere della Sera.
Glanville is noted for taking a critical view of many issues,
often in contrast to the typical British sportswriter, for example,
since its formation he criticised the Premier League as the "Greed is Good
League"[6] and FIFA president Sepp Blatter is
referred to as 'Sepp (50 ideas a day, 51 bad) Blatter' relating to
his comments on women's football and the introduction of the silver goal (see
Blatter article for more details).
During the 1960s, Glanville also worked as a writer for the
satirical BBC TV programme That Was The Week That
Was and wrote the screenplay for Goal!, the BAFTA award
winning official film of the 1966 World Cup. As a
novelist he has written mostly about football and life in Italy,
with his 1956 novel Along the Arno particularly
well-received by critics. He has also written The Story of the
World
Cup, a frequently updated history of the FIFA tournament.
Away from writing about football, Glanville is a life-long
supporter of Arsenal
F.C.
Bibliography
[7]
Novels
- The Reluctant Dictator - London, Laurie, 1952.
- Henry Sows the Wind - London, Secker and Warburg,
1954.
- Along the Arno - London, Secker and Warburg, 1956; New
York, Crowell, 1957.
- The Bankrupts - London, Secker and Warburg, and New
York, Doubleday, 1958.
- After Rome, Africa - London, Secker and Warburg,
1959.
- Diamond - London, Secker and Warburg, and New York,
FarrarStraus, 1962.
- The Rise of Gerry Logan - London, Secker and Warburg,
1963; NewYork, Delacorte Press, 1965.
- A Second Home - London, Secker and Warburg, 1965; New
York, Delacorte Press, 1966.
- A Roman Marriage - London, Joseph, 1966; New York,
CowardMcCann, 1967.
- The Artist Type - London, Cape, 1967; New York, Coward
McCann, 1968.
- The Olympian - New York, Coward McCann, and London,
Secker andWarburg, 1969.
- A Cry of Crickets - London, Secker and Warburg, and
New York, Coward McCann, 1970.
- The Financiers - London, Secker and Warburg, 1972; as
Money Is Love, New York, Doubleday, 1972.
- The Comic - London, Secker and Warburg, 1974; New
York, Stein andDay, 1975.
- The Dying of the Light - London, Secker and Warburg,
1976.
- Never Look Back - London, Joseph, 1980.
- Kissing America - London, Blond, 1985.
- The Catacomb - London, Hodder and Stoughton,
1988.
- Dictators - London, Smaller Sky Books, 2001.
Short
Stories
- A Bad Streak and Other Stories - London, Secker and
Warburg, 1961.
- The Director's Wife and Other Stories - London, Secker
and Warburg, 1963.
- Goalkeepers Are Crazy: A Collection of Football
Stories - London, Secker and Warburg, 1964.
- The King of Hackney Marshes and Other Stories -
London, Secker andWarburg, 1965.
- A Betting Man - New York, Coward McCann, 1969.
- Penguin Modern Stories 10, with others - London,
Penguin, 1972.
- The Thing He Loves and Other Stories - London, Secker
and Warburg, 1973.
- A Bad Lot and Other Stories - London, Penguin,
1977.
- Love Is Not Love and Other Stories - London, Blond,
1985.
Plays
- Visit to the Villa (produced Chichester, Sussex, 1981).
- Underneath the Arches, with Patrick Garland and Roy
Hudd (produced Chichester, Sussex, 1981; London, 1982).
Screenplays
(documentary)
Radio
Plays
- The Diary, 1987; I Could Have Been King,
1988.
- Television Documentaries: European Centre Forward,
1963.
Other
- Cliff Bastin Remembers, with Cliff Bastin. London,
Ettrick Press, 1950.
- Arsenal Football Club, London, Convoy, 1952.
- Soccer Nemesis, London, Secker and Warburg, 1955.
- World Cup, with Jerry Weinstein. London, Hale,
1958.
- Over the Bar, with Jack Kelsey. London, Paul,
1958.
- Soccer round the Globe, London, Abelard Schuman,
1959.
- Know about Football (for children). London, Blackie,
1963.
- World Football Handbook (annual), London, Hodder and
Stoughton, 1964; London, Mayflower, 1966-72; London, Queen Anne
Press, 1974.
- People in Sport, London, Secker and Warburg,
1967.
- Soccer: A History of the Game, Its Players, and Its
Strategy, NewYork, Crown, 1968; as Soccer: A
Panorama, London, Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1969.
- The Puffin Book of Football (for children), London,
Penguin, 1970; revised edition, 1984.
- Goalkeepers Are Different (for children), London,
Hamish Hamilton, 1971; New York, Crown, 1972.
- Brian Glanville's Book of World Football, London,
Dragon, 1972.
- The Sunday Times History of the World Cup, London,
Times Newspapers, 1973; as History of the Soccer World
Cup, New York, Macmillan, 1974; revised edition, as The
History of the World Cup, London, Faber, 1980, 1984; revised
edition, as The Story of the World Cup, London, Faber,
1997.
- Soccer 76, London, Queen Anne Press, 1975.
- Target Man (for children), London, Macdonald and
Jane's, 1978.
- The Puffin Book of Footballers, London, Penguin, 1978;
revised edition, as Brian Glanville's Book of Footballers,
1982.
- A Book of Soccer, New York, Oxford University Press,
1979.
- Kevin Keegan (for children), London, Hamish Hamilton,
1981.
- The Puffin Book of Tennis (for children), London,
Penguin, 1981.
- The Puffin Book of the World Cup (for children),
London, Penguin, 1984.
- The British Challenge (on the Los Angeles Olympics
team), with Kevin Whitney, London, Muller, 1984.
- Footballers Don't Cry: Selected Writings, London,
Virgin, 1999.
- Football Memories, London, Virgin, 1999.
- Arsenal Stadium History, London, Hamlyn, 2006.
- England Managers - The Toughest Job in Football,
London, Headline, 2007.
- Editor, Footballer's Who's Who, London, Ettrick Press,
1951.
- Editor, The Footballer's Companion, London, Eyre and
Spottiswoode, 1962.
- Editor, The Joy of Football, London, Hodder and
Stoughton, 1986.
Notes
External
links