World Cup Fever has arrived, and readers can warm up with three marvelous books from The Overlook Press that explore the worldwide fascination and obsession with the sport.
THE SECRET LIVES OF SPORTS FANS explores the science
behind sports obsession, and if there was ever a sport that generated
obsession, it must be World Cup soccer. Author Eric Simons argues sports fandom
is either an aspect of a person’s fundamental identity, or completely
incomprehensible to those who aren’t fans at all. What is happening in our
brains and bodies when we feel strong emotion while watching a game? How do
sports fans resemble political junkies, and why do we form such a strong
attachment to a sports team? Through reading the literature and attending
neuroscience conferences, talking to fans, psychologists, and scientists, and
working through his issues as part of a collaboration with the NPR science
program RadioLab, Eric Simons hoped to find an answer that would explain why
the attractive force of this relationship with treasured sports teams is so
great that we can’t leave it.

"Thank God for David Winner ...with an easy wit, Winner traces the game
back to its roots and the results are as intriguing as they are amusing
...Those Feet really is a marvelous book and you’re unlikely to come across anything better for some considerable time." —Duncan White, FourFourTwo
"Winner has made as good a stab at psychoanalyzing England’s national sport as I have read." —Daily Telegraph
Also by David Winner, BRILLIANT ORANGE is a book
about Dutch soccer that's not really about Dutch soccer. It's more about an
enigmatic way of thinking peculiar to a people whose landscape is unrelentingly
flat, mostly below sea level, and who owe their salvation to a boy who plugged
a fractured dike with his little finger. If any one thing, Brilliant Orange is
about Dutch space, and a people whose unique conception of it has led to some
of the most enduring art, the weirdest architecture, and a bizarrely cerebral
form of soccer-Total Football-that led in 1974 to a World Cup finals match with
arch-rival Germany, and continues with its intricacy and oddity to mystify and
delight observers around the world. As idiosyncratic as its subject, quirky and
provocative, Brilliant Orange reaches out to the reader from an unsuspected
place and never lets go.
"Winner has made as good a stab at psychoanalyzing England’s national sport as I have read." —Daily Telegraph