UNITED WE FALL: BOARDROOM TRUTHS ABOUT THE BEAUTIFUL GAME
Peter Ridsdale
£ 18.99 Macmillan
“ Publicity Pete” Ridsdale faced a PR job that would have scared Max Clifford silent when he decided to pen a defence of his five-year reign as Leeds chairman. That he even dared to relive the expensive decisions which saw the modest Yorkshire club soar to a Champions League semi-final before sliding back towards financial meltdown and oblivion, was astonishingly brave for a man who has frequently been covered in saliva because of the perceived consequences of his time in charge. But then, as this fascinating book shows, the current Cardiff City chairman has a lot to get off his chest. His principle point is both correct and obvious to anyone who watches football and maintains an IQ in double figures: namely, that Leeds’ disintegration was as much the fault of bad managers and fellow board members as it was his over-spending. He also puts forward a convincing argument against those claiming the club’s current problems – some four years after he resigned in 2003 – are a knock-on effect of his mismanagement. Along the way he unravels some popular myths about goldfish and the stresses of running a football club, but makes few excuses for some of the undoubtedly stupid decisions he made. In all, the result is a thought-provoking read for those Cardiff fans adamant such a derided figure should not be allowed near Ninian Park.
Richie McGowan

SHOOT THE PUPPY
Tony Thorne
£ 9.99, Penguin
It might not be a cool thing to confess, but I’m a word nerd. Or to use geek speak, I’m a logophile. In other words, someone who loves, well, words, which is handy if you want to make your living as a wordsmith/hack but doesn’t necessarily make for a dream date at parties. It’s a bit of a shame really because language and its ever-shifting evolution is a fascinating subject, especially at the moment due to the sheer rate of linguistic change with creative words and phrases sprouting up all over the shop. Hence this compendium which corrals together some of the more bleeding-edge metaphors, slang and acronyms currently infiltrating our vocabs. Predictably, management-speak offers up many of the most bizarrely inventive: ‘shoot the puppy’ is to do what no one else in the office has the courage to; an ‘open-kimono philosophy’ makes protestations of corporate honesty sound sexy.

If all this sounds too dorkishly boring, the brilliance of the book is that it makes language and all its eccentric kinks and quirks accessible, interesting and, most importantly, fun, primarily because it doesn’t take itself too seriously. Acronyms probably provide the most fertile humour ground with abbreviations like BOBFOC (Body Off Baywatch, Face Off Crimewatch), or how iPod is no longer just a portable jukebox but has also become shorthand for the disenchantment of a generation (insecure, Pressurised, over-taxed and debt-ridden), or my own personal favourite the numerical term ‘1661’ which suggests a date of great importance but instead, rather cruelly, refers to a woman who from behind looks 16 but from the front looks 61, not only raising a chuckle but also showing the imaginative way the language of the street is disseminated throughout the whole of culture. With its dictionary format, chatty style and dipping-in-and-out appeal, Shoot The Puppy is the perfect loo read.

AND ANOTHER THING
Jeremy Clarkson
£ 7.99, Penguin
You know Christmas is a-coming because The Clarkson starts mugging our media gaze with a welter of TV shows, DVDs and, of course, the metronome-predictable release of a couple of books. One of them is niche market because it covers his specialist motorhead subject, but this has much more broad-sweep appeal. Subtitled The World According To Clarkson: Volume 2, this is the follow-up to his 2005 bestseller and takes his scalpel-sharp Sunday Times columns and bungs the best in one collection. You must have been living under a very remote rock not to know the Clarksonian modus operandi - forthright, doggedly non-PC and full of stinging bluster, it’s not shy and retiring in any way. And that’s why he’s such a great polariser and such a great columnist because opinion pieces by their very nature live and die by the bravery of their writers: woollily seeing the argument from all angles just won’t fly. So we have broadsides against fervent environmentalists, health & safety jobsworthiness and Russians in Speedos with Clarkson playing the ham-panto villain with thigh-slapping gusto, as well as giving some surprisingly astute insights. An ideal stocking filler.

 

Jason Jones is a real logophile

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