— The Podium

April’s Fool

After reading some ‘serious’ books over the last 3 months I thought it might be nice for a change to read something a little light-hearted. Below are 5 books relating to Cycling, Soccer, American Football, Golf and Cricket all of which have a feel good factor about them. Well maybe not feel good but definitely good humoured.

The votes will be counted and released on Friday on the website. Apologies on the past few months as deadlines have been tight but it is my goal to be able to tell you the book before the start of the month in future.

Have a look at the books below, make sure to vote at the bottom of the page and leave a comment.

French Revolutions: Cycling the Tour de France by Tim Moore

French Revolutions: Cycling the Tour de France

Seduced by the speed and glamour of the biggest annual sporting event in the world, and determined to tackle the most fearsome physical challenge outside classical mythology, Moore, the ultimate amateur, attempts to complete all 3,630km of the 2000 Tour in the weeks before the professionals set off.

Battling it out with the old men on butchers’ bikes across the plains of Aquitaine and pursued by cattle over Europe’s second highest road, Moore soon finds himself resorting to narcotic assistance, systematic overeating and waxed legs before summoning a support vehicle staffed by cruelly sceptical family and friends. Accounts of his suffering and chicanery, and those encountered in the race’s epic history, are interwoven through a look at rural France busy tarting itself up for those 15 seconds of fame as the Tour careers through at 50kph. An heroic depiction of an inadequate man’s attempt to achieve the unachievable, Moore’s Tour is a tale of calorific excess, ludicrous clothing and intimate discomfort.

Football Manager Stole My Life: 20 Years of Beautiful Obsession by Iain Macintosh, Kenny Millar and Neil White

Football Manager Stole My Life: 20 Years of Beautiful Obsession by Iain Macintosh, Kenny Millar and Neil White

Football Manager Stole My Life lifts the lid on the cult of Football Manager (FM). It is an easy-to-read, highly illustrated, light-hearted guide to the game s lasting impact on popular culture. We hear from the gamers whose lives have been taken over by FM, a game cited in 35 divorce cases in the UK. There are interviews with the players who become world beaters in the game, but in real life never make the big leagues. The incredible scouting network of Sports Interactive is revealed. We speak to the men who make the game, and put an FM addict on the psychologist s couch to discover what 20 years as a virtual football manager has done to him.

Paper Lion: Confessions of a Last-String Quarterback by George Plimpton

Paper Lion: Confessions of a Last-String Quarterback by George Plimpton

Through the course of a long and distinguished career in letters, George Plimpton has crafted an art form from participatory journalism, and Paper Lion is his big touchdown. In the mid-’60s, Plimpton joined the Detroit Lions at their preseason camp as a 36-year-old rookie quarterback wannabe, and stuck with the club through an intra-squad game before the paying public a month later. What resulted is one of the funniest and most insightful books ever written on the game; 30 years later it remains a major model of what was then blossoming into New Journalism. Plimpton’s breezy style wonderfully captures the pressures and tensions rookies confront in trying to make it, the hijinks that pervade the atmosphere when 60 high-strung guys are forced to live together in close quarters, and the host of rites and rituals with which football loves to coat itself. Of course, Plimpton didn’t make it as a football hero; he barely accounts himself with dignity on the field, which is just as well. You don’t have to be a lion when you’ve got a typewriter that can roar.

Dead Solid Perfect by Dan Jenkins

Dead Solid Perfect by Dan Jenkins

The legendary golf novel, rereleased in a special edition with a new foreword by the author.

Don Imus said it best: “Dan Jenkins is a comic genius.” And nowhere is that genius more evident than in Dead Solid Perfect, his uproarious 1974 novel about life on the PGA Tour. To some, Kenny Lee Puckett, the star of Jenkins’s ribald saga, is a more important figure in the history of golf than Bobby Jones himself.

Slipless In Settle: A Slow Turn Around Northern Cricket by Harry Pearson

Slipless In Settle: A Slow Turn Around Northern Cricket by Harry Pearson

Slipless in Settle is a sentimental journey around club cricket in the north of England, a world far removed from the clichéd lengthening-shadows-on-the-village-green image of the summer game. This is hardcore cricket played in former pit villages and mill towns. Winner of the 2011 MCC Cricket Book of the Year, it is about the little clubs that have, down the years, produced some of the greatest players Britain has ever seen, and at one time spent a fortune on importing the biggest names in the international game to boost their battle for local supremacy.

Slipless in Settle is a warm, affectionate and outrageously funny sporting odyssey in which Andrew Flintoff and Learie Constantine rub shoulders with Asbo-tag-wearing all-rounders, there’s hot-pot pie and mushy peas at the tea bar, two types of mild in the clubhouse, and a batsman is banned for a month for wearing a fireman’s helmet when going out to face Joel Garner.

Vote for April’s Book

What do you think of this months books and what are you hoping to read?