A Man's Game

Fiction & Literature
Cover of the book A Man's Game by Alan Ness, ringwood publishing
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Author: Alan Ness ISBN: 1230000845878
Publisher: ringwood publishing Publication: December 14, 2015
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Alan Ness
ISBN: 1230000845878
Publisher: ringwood publishing
Publication: December 14, 2015
Imprint:
Language: English

On a Saturday afternoon in central Scotland, both Davie Thomson and Stuart Robertson have scored goals for their respective football clubs: Cowden United FC and Glasgow Athletic. Once team-mates in the Athletic title-winning side of 2001, their subsequent fortunes could not have been more different. Whilst Robertson had gone from strength to strength, winning titles and the love of the Scottish public, Thomson had slipped out of the team and down the leagues, with alcohol and a weight problem contributing to his fall.
Whilst scanning the results, James Donnelly, reporter for the Daily Standard, connected the two and remembered the tragic events which would forever link them and their team-mates from that ill-fated side. Setting out to write an article on the murder of a man, Donnelly finds himself uncovering the story of the mistreatment of a woman.
A Man’s Game is a contemporary crime novel which brilliantly explores issues of violence,  addiction, and misogyny, both in "the beautiful game"  and in wider Scottish society.

In the words of one review
“Much more than just a crime story with a football setting,  A Man’s Game is an intelligent and perceptive examination of the darker strands that lie just beneath the complacent surface of Scotland’s favourite game and the press and society that report and support it.”

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

On a Saturday afternoon in central Scotland, both Davie Thomson and Stuart Robertson have scored goals for their respective football clubs: Cowden United FC and Glasgow Athletic. Once team-mates in the Athletic title-winning side of 2001, their subsequent fortunes could not have been more different. Whilst Robertson had gone from strength to strength, winning titles and the love of the Scottish public, Thomson had slipped out of the team and down the leagues, with alcohol and a weight problem contributing to his fall.
Whilst scanning the results, James Donnelly, reporter for the Daily Standard, connected the two and remembered the tragic events which would forever link them and their team-mates from that ill-fated side. Setting out to write an article on the murder of a man, Donnelly finds himself uncovering the story of the mistreatment of a woman.
A Man’s Game is a contemporary crime novel which brilliantly explores issues of violence,  addiction, and misogyny, both in "the beautiful game"  and in wider Scottish society.

In the words of one review
“Much more than just a crime story with a football setting,  A Man’s Game is an intelligent and perceptive examination of the darker strands that lie just beneath the complacent surface of Scotland’s favourite game and the press and society that report and support it.”

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