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THE MANCHESTER CITY QUIZ BOOK
TITLE The Manchester City Quiz Book
AUTHOR John Maddocks
PUBLISHER Mainstream Publishing Company (Edinburgh) Ltd.
7 Albany St.,
Edinburgh EH1 3UG,
Scotland.
ISBN No 1 85158 196 0
PRICE £4.95 (1988)
This is a card-backed A5 book of 142 pages, containing 38 black & white
photos. The format is basically what you would expect; a brief foreword by
Colin Bell leads straight into a total of 1000 questions which are grouped
into sections, with the answers similarly grouped at the rear of the book.
The book covers in the main, the post-war period up to the 1987-88 season.
A few examples of the sections serve to give a taste of what's on offer:
Début Days, One League Game, Anagrams, Photo Quiz, Welsh Internationals,
The American Connection, Arrivals and Departures etc. There is a wealth of
information here, much of which would probably remain buried if it were not
for a book like this. It's not a book for reading, more for browsing
through a little at a time, testing your knowledge. Be warned though, many
of the questions are rather difficult! I knew Kazi Deyna had been in the
Polish Army and that he had been in two World Cups but I had absolutely no
idea how many caps he had won! It was 102 (Does this make him City's most
capped player?).
There are two things I must criticise and almost certainly these are down
to the publisher rather than the author. Firstly, the curious practice of
printing a photo which takes up the top 40% of the page and then three or
four questions which relate to the photo beneath it. This might not seem
odd until I reveal that the whole takes up only half the page, the bottom
being left completely blank (this is done several times)! Surely a larger
picture could have been used or perhaps a more efficient layout employed,
publishing basics I would have thought. Secondly, the pictures are
occasionally of very poor quality indeed; there is an almost ridiculous one
on page 48 where we are supposed to answer some questions on the player
depicted. Most of these are cases where you scratch your head trying to
remember his name but in this case the print is so bad, it's almost a
lottery trying to guess who he is. I'm fairly certain that this was not
what the author had in mind when he set the question. Strangely, the answer
is Colin Bell but I'm afraid I just don't buy it; my personal guess is that
it's the wrong print and that in fact, those chunky thighs belong to one
Joe Royle esq!
This book is very reasonably priced, contains a plethora of interesting
facts and should make an interesting read for any Blue. Perhaps we
shouldn't expect too much in the way of quality from a book which is aimed
at a specialist market with consequent low volume sales. I do however, feel
that Mr Maddocks' unrivalled knowledge of the club deserves a better
quality product than this. Let's hope that he plans to do a definitive
history or something similar.
Ashley Birch
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