Product Description
Originally published in 1960, this is the award winning debut novel from David Storey, This Sporting Life, in this film tie in edition from Penguin UK, 1963, with an image from the film of Richard Harris on the cover. Light tanning to the page block, otherwise unmarked. Slight spine lean, No inscriptions internally.
Vintage Eason price label on the front cover.
A rugby player finds fame and fortune in a bleak mining town, but he cannot outrun the emptiness he feels inside in Man Booker Prize-winning author David Storey's seminal first novel.
On Christmas Eve, Arthur breaks his two front teeth. A teammate on the rugby pitch is too slow with a handoff, and instead of catching the ball, Art catches an opponent's foot right in the mouth. When he regains consciousness, the match is almost over, but he keeps playing regardless. Where else would he go? His entire life, Art has only cared about sports and nothing grabs his attention quite like the lightning-fast violence of Rugby League. He knows it could kill him, but it also makes him feel alive. In this hard-bitten Yorkshire mining town, the warriors of the rugby pitch are treated like gods. Through the aggressive sport, Art finds money, friends, and countless women. But when his lust for violence begins to fade, will he have the courage to leave the game behind? "Extraordinarily mature-technically as well as emotionally" -The Sunday Times "The best novel about sport I've read." -Caryl Phillips, author of The Final Passage "[An] impressive first novel." -The New York Times "An absorbing writer." -The New Yorker
David Storey was born in 1933 in Yorkshire, England, and studied at the Slade School of Fine Art. His novels have won many prizes, including the Macmillan Fiction Award, the Somerset Maugham Award, the Geoffrey Faber Memorial Prize, and the Man Booker Prize. He is also the author of fifteen plays and is a fellow of University College London.
Richard Harris, the noted actor from Limerick, made his name in the film version of this novel.