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Among the Thugs
 

Among the Thugs
written by Bill Buford
Studio : Vintage
by Vintage
Release Date : 1993-06-01
Publisher : Vintage
Released : 1993-06-01
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Number of Items : 1
EAN : 9780679745358
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 69 reviews)

List Price : $15.95
Our Price : $8.98


Editorial Reviews for  'Among the Thugs'
 
Product Description
With an Orwellian social imagination, Granta editor Buford offers a terrifying record of his passage through an alternate society--that of England's soccer thugs--in this malevolently funny, supremely chilling document of the allure of crowd violence. Author reading tour.
 
Customer Reviews for  'Among the Thugs'
 
true football lovers
it's an awesome book and I havnt even finished. I would have never bought this book but I need it in one of my classes in college, "intro to world history through soccer" man, my class is like 3 weeks from now but I' just started reading the book a week ago so that I could go to bed faster but it's really interesting and makes you wanna read a lot more...
so far, it tells you about the first hand experience about football hooligans in england, specially man utd.
 
A Good Starter on Football Hooliganism
I'd highly recommend American Bill Buford's book on the ultra-violent and alcohol-drenched world of English soccer hooligans. Like many of the reviewers, I'd have to agree that Buford doesn't really get down to "brass tacks" as far as providing a psychological and sociological explanation for the absolutely criminal behavior of these "fans", but then, he's neither a sociologist nor a "trick cyclist", but a journalist.

I found the book fabulously entertaining and a great read. Buford actually insinuated his way into the ranks of some of the legendary groups of supporters, drank with them, traveled with them, witnessed firsthand, and yes--even participated in--some of the punchups, the assaults, the pillaging, the burning, the looting and the out-and-out savagery of some of England's most famous "firms". If you enjoy English football, don't mind a bit of violence, and have a soft spot in your heart for crude, loutish, besotted yobbos, you'll enjoy this book too!

I'd also recommend Bill Gardiner's books. He's the head of the infamous West Ham (London) group of supporters, and no doubt one of England's authentic "hard men".
 
Don't Believe Pretentious Twits
This is a fantastic book, and what's more, it has served as a model and inspiration for the many (many, many) football hooligan books that followed.

I won't really comment on the absolute cliched tripe served up by one reviewer who gave this book one star, but I would point out that he might want to take some time out from an all-knowing banality spouting, error decrying, schedule, and consult a calendar.

Among The Thugs - 1993. Most of the others? 1999 and later, including the 2005(!) Gardner tome. This book, almost alone, spawned a veritable minor industry of Football Hooligan memoirs and reportage. Don't believe me? Head over to amazon.co.uk and check it out all the related items with this book over there.

By the way, I think it was sort of the point of the experiment that an editor of a (very popular in the right circles) literary magazine like Granta went and did what he did, and reported what he saw. And in the Granta tradition, he expounds a bit on What It All Means. That gets a little dull at times, but by no means lessens the overall interest of the book.

Among the Thugs is not meant to be a piece of documentary journalism, oral history, or a PhD thesis. It's a subjective and personal account, and the author makes no bones about that. The author did, objectively, get beaten to a pulp by Italian cops, so there's some credibility right there.
 
Readable Yet Overwrought - Thought Provking
Bill Buford offers an engaging narrative about violent British soccer fans, yet one does begin to suspect some exaggeration and ornamentation. Saying that these fans behave the way they do because they lack a solid home base is reductionist and not helpful at all. Many millions around the world live in conditions that leave a great deal to be desired--indeed far worse than the living conditions of a violent soccer fan--yet they don't engage in what the British call "antisocial behavior."

There is no excuse for hooliganism and bad behavior. To find "causes" for lawbreaking, be it soccer violence in Europe or drug dealing in America, is a step toward tolerating and even forgiving it.

Generations of black Americans have been raised under the impression that racism is an insurmountable problem and that they have to go outside the law to survive. This perception is so strong that Barack Obama's presidential bid was dismissed early on by some of the most seasoned political analysts as well as civil rights leaders in this country. They thought that America was simply too racist to even consider a black president. Obana was jumping the gun, they said, damaging his own chances in a distant future. When those whose words make public opinion are so out of touch with the American reality, what can one expect of a black teenager who is attending an under-funded school? Getting away from the subject? Not really. The world knows American black youth culture largely through hip-hop music and all the fashion, DVDs, games and other paraphernalia it generates. Many teenagers all around the world, in their angst and search for identity, claim victimhood and try to emulate a thug life with various degrees of conviction. The British "antisocilas" are themselves informed by such imported gangsterism. Few understand that for every gangsta or gagsta wannabe there are thousands of black Americans who go to college, fill professional echelons or start legitimate businesses.

Instead of trying to "understand" thugs, of whatever color or stripe, let's concentrate on those who really understand and avoid thug life under any guise for the boring, graceless, destructive existence it is without ever being sullied by it.
 
Weak and patronizing. Can't respect the author.
There's a lot to hope for in this book, but it fails badly. The author never comes across as even remotely credible. His writing reflects his snobbish background and beliefs. He went to college at Berkeley, then elite Cambridge, and he clearly feels that he is above the subjects of the book in every way. The jacket says he edits a literary magazine, and now he thinks he can ingratiate himself with football thugs? Please. He may be American, but he's apparently been infected with that classic British class thing. His book is full of comments on how stupid and ugly the people he is interviewing are. He talks at length about how he tries to get the "animals" at various pitches to let him interview them. Too bad he was posing the whole time, trying to be "cool" but really manipulating his subjects for his own use. In fact one gets the impression that this was Mr. Well Educated/Snobby Lit Magazine Guy doing his bit of slumming. I'm sure he's drunk many a glass of wine, chuckling with his tweed-wearing Eton buddies, self congratulating on how he survived many nights in those nasty pubs, coaches and terraces with the "idiotic" football supporters. Minor but telling points: he can't even get Bill Gardner's name right (West Ham's top man with the ICF) and lastly, that cover photo is not even of a football thug, it's called "The Smoker" by some random photographer. Can't get Bill Gardner's name right and he's doing a book on football violence? Good Lord, there's an entire book about Bill: "Good Afternoon Gentlemen, The Name's Bill Gardner." There's his name, pal. And we're supposed to believe your book is the real deal? Sorry man--go back to where you belong--editing James Joyce or something--and don't pretend to be what are not. This book is from a poser and not worth a purchase.
 
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