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    Red or Dead

    David Peace - author of the brilliant 'The Damned United' and the 'Red Riding' quartet - is to release a book about Bill Shankly called 'Red or Dead'.



    Faber are thrilled to announce the imminent publication of a new novel by David Peace. Red or Dead is a revolutionary novel about a revolutionary man; Bill Shankly, perhaps the first great football manager of the Modern Age.

    "I have written about corruption, I've written about crime, I've written about bad men and I've written about the demons. But now I've had enough of the bad men and the demons. Now I want to write about a good man. And a saint. A Red Saint. Bill Shankly was not just a great football manager. Bill Shankly was one of the greatest men who ever lived. And the supporters of Liverpool Football Club, and the people of Liverpool the city, know that and remember him. But many people outside of football, outside of Liverpool, do not know or do not remember him. And now – more than ever – it's time everybody knew about Bill Shankly. About what he achieved, about what he believed. And how he led his life. Not for himself, for other people." David Peace

    In 1959, Liverpool Football Club were in the Second Division. Liverpool Football Club had never won the FA Cup. Fifteen seasons later, Liverpool Football Club had won three League titles, two FA Cups and the UEFA Cup. Liverpool Football Club had become the most consistently successful team in England. And the most passionately supported club. Their manager was revered as a god. Destined for immortality. Their manager was Bill Shankly. His job was his life. His life was football. His football a form of socialism. Bill Shankly inspired people. Bill Shankly transformed people. The players and the supporters.

    In 1974, Liverpool Football Club and Bill Shankly stood on the verge of even greater success. In England and in Europe. But in 1974, Bill Shankly shocked Liverpool and football. Bill Shankly resigned. Bill Shankly retired.

    Red or Dead is the story of the rise of Liverpool Football Club and Bill Shankly. And the story of the retirement of Bill Shankly. Of one man and his work. And of the man after that work. A man in two halves. Home and away. Red or dead.

    September 2013 sees the centenary of Bill Shankly’s birth.

    "A novel about one of the great good men of British football comes as such a tonic and a wake-up-call in these days of extraordinary wealth, privilege and abuse of both in the Premier League. There quite simply could not be a better time, culturally and politically, for this novel. David Peace’s ninth novel is an epic in scale and ambition. If The Damned Utd re-defined how fiction can make compelling drama and art out of sport, Red or Dead, rips up the rulebook and does so all over again." Lee Brackstone, Creative Director, Faber Social

    –––––

    David Peace – named in 2003 as one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists – was born and brought up in Yorkshire. He is the author of the Red Riding Quartet (Nineteen Seventy Four, Nineteen Seventy Seven, Nineteen Eighty and Nineteen Eighty Three) which was adapted into a three part Channel 4 series (2009), GB84 which was awarded the James Tait Black Memorial Award, and The Damned Utd, the film version of which was released in 2009. Tokyo Year Zero, the first part of his acclaimed Tokyo Trilogy, was published in 2007, and the second part, Occupied City, in 2009. The final volume of the trilogy will follow publication of Red or Dead. David lives with his family in Tokyo.

    World rights excluding Japan were bought by Lee Brackstone in a deal with Hamish Macaskill at The English Agency. Rob Kraitt at Casarotto Ramsay handles the film rights.

    David will be in the UK and available for interview at publication in August. For further information, please contact Anna Pallai on [email protected].
    You can listen to a short reading from the book at the above link.
    Last edited by Shaggy; 15-01-13, 01:06 PM.
    Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

    #2
    Let's hope it's not as unreadable as the Tokyo stodge.

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      #3
      Hmm, I read the first of the Red Riding books and didn't feel any need to read the subsequents.

      Damned United was a decent read though.

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        #4
        Red Riding Quartet gets much better. 1974 reads like a pretty generic psycho-killer story with the swans wings and all that bull****, but when they plots start to tie in closer to Sutcliffe and the police corruption everything improves drastically.

        That said, there's a short cip of him reading a bit from Red or Dead, and the chorus-style repetition of prose got annoying as **** in a hurry.

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          #5
          Nick Barley ‏@nickbarleyedin
          David Peace's Bill Shankly book runs to over 1000 pages, @leebrackstone tells me. Will that make it the longest Man Booker shortlister yet?
          Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

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            #6
            It's 270k words. That's ****ing insane.

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              #7
              Scared of a quarter of a million words, are we?

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                #8
                who will play shanks in the movie?
                dave of mutilation

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by little dave hedgehog View Post
                  who will play shanks in the movie?
                  Brendan Gleeson??

                  Comment


                    #10
                    So long as it isn't Stephen Graham. He massacred a scottish accent in Damned United.

                    Hollow - yeah, the generic killer hunt and grim subject matter put me off. If it moves away from the massacre and mutilation of kids, then maybe it might be worth reading the rest of the series.

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                      #11
                      Mine came today. It's ****ing massive. Had a quick flick and it is heavy on repetition....every single time LFC are referred to it is "Liverpool Football Club". Classic Peace really, with the short sentences. Here's a quick sample.

                      "Bill watched Ray Clemence try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Chris Lawler try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Alec Lindsay try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Ian Ross try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Larry Lloyd try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Emlyn Hughes try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Brian Hall try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched John McLaughlin try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Steve Heighway try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. Bill watched Bobby Graham try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. And Bill watched Ian Callaghan try his hardest for Liverpool Football Club. But Bill saw no drive. Bill saw no leadership. And Bill saw no spark. Bill saw no fire. Bill saw no goals. And on the bench, the bench at the Victoria Ground. Bill watched Liverpool Football Club draw nil-nil with Stoke City."
                      700 odd pages of this sort of stuff.
                      Thanks very much for being ‘This Mornings’ Farmer’

                      Comment


                        #12
                        "I will make the boys feel your support"
                        Jurgen Klopp June 2020

                        Comment


                          #13


                          David Peace constructs a compelling account of Bill Shankly’s Liverpool in Red Or Dead



                          It’s been some years since football escaped the ghetto of the back pages but the notion of the sport taking its place in literature still raises eyebrows.

                          David Peace brilliantly challenged that status quo in The Damned Utd, an account of Brian Clough’s turbulent weeks in charge of Leeds United; the strength of Peace’s voice and his unpicking of a complex character proved richly rewarding.

                          Now the writer returns to football to portray another celebrated manager, but the formidably disciplined Bill Shankly was a very different man from the troubled Clough and this novelised biography is quite unlike the stormy drama of the earlier book.

                          Taking charge of Liverpool in 1959, Shankly rebuilt the club that had languished in the second division, transforming it into the force that would dominate the English game for decades to come.

                          Then, after 15 magisterial years in charge, the Scotsman turned-adopted-Scouser stunned his legions of adoring fans with the sudden announcement of his retirement. By then, this forceful, uncompromising personality had established himself as one of those rare figures who transcend the game to become part of a city’s lore and wider culture.

                          It was he who quipped: ‘Some people believe football is a matter of life and death, I am very disappointed with that attitude. I can assure you it is much, much more important than that.’ He was, at most, half-joking.

                          Rather than picking out a single chapter in Shankly’s career, Peace attempts nothing less than a full account of his entire time at Liverpool and of the years of retirement that followed.

                          It’s a monumental task and the way Peace goes about it may sound daunting: the laborious detailing of the facts that made up the days and weeks and years of Shankly’s reign at Liverpool; the training; the results; brief snatches of conversation with his family; his obsessive planning and nocturnal thoughts – followed by the melancholy inadequacy of what filled the void in his days after he left.

                          Yet the cumulative effect of all the repetition, which sees the name Bill peppered throughout most pages, is entirely compelling. The writing is honed, sculpted, poetic. Peace gives us Shankly the man and the manager, and his philosophy and socialist belief in the collective loom large. But this is also a story of a working man and how the daily, single-minded application of labour can lead to great achievement.

                          Peace has built what is a worthy monument to a figure light years removed from the megabucks and hype of today’s football. It doesn’t matter if you don’t follow the game, this is also a profound investigation of the tension between aspiration and the constraints of time, the very essence of the human condition.
                          What do you mean it could've been anyone? Name me one person who's got a grudge against penguins

                          Batman

                          F*** off!!!

                          Comment


                            #14
                            At least it isn't like Occupied City. He completely lost his **** with that one.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              I started reading it last night. I ended up staying up late and reading 20% of the book (I'm reading it on a kindle). It's absolutely amazing. I haven't seen this discussed anywhere, but he seems to be modeling it on Homer's 'Iliad,' hence the repetition of set phrases and tropes (and, no doubt, its length).

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