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Rush: The Autobiography

By: Ian Rush
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Ebury Press
ISBN: 0091928052
ISBN-13: 9780091928056
Released: 21 Aug 2008
RRP: £18.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Legendary goalscorer, mediocre book - By: Toxic Reader, 04 Oct 2008
This book suffers from being badly written, which is a shame because Ian Rush was a hero to me when I was growing up. I was looking forward to this book & to be fair the first few chapters were reasonably entertaining, but before long it became the cliched footballl autobiography & there are long sections explaining the fine details of certain games. As a Liverpool fan, I am aware of these games & I can watch them on DVD if need be; there is nothing more boring than a running commentary of runs, dribbles & passes. Maybe it's because Rushy was naturallly a quiet person that there doesn't seem to be too many reallly interesting anecdotes in this book, however his revelations about not originallly warming to Kenny Dalglish & his opinions of his team mates at Juventus are quite interesting. One more thing, the chronology of some of the events are a bit perplexing at times (obviously the proof reading was a bit lax), one passage that springs to mind has Rushy being in Australia playing for Sydney Olympic & getting a calll from Rick Parry asking if he'd like to help Rafa with the coaching. Given that Rushy was in Australia until 2000 & Rafa didn't come to Liverpool until 2004....

Bad editing aside, it's still an average read I'm afraid, but thanks Rushy for your 346 goals & lots more besides, you're still & always will be a Legend!

Disappointing - By: DF, 16 Sep 2008
This should have been good, actuallly it should have been better than good, when you think of the games & times that Ian Rush played in for Liverpool. Lets not beat around the bush Ian Rush is the greatest striker Liverpool have ever known who played in some of the great teams & great games of his time. Unfortunately this book does not measure up to the career of the player

More than anything I think he has been let down by the people who worked on the book with him. I lost count of the number of grammatical errors, misspelt words & in some cases names of players (Stevie NicHol????, Neil Macdonald in the 86 Cup Final Liverpool team (didn't he play for Everton, as opposed to Kevin Macdonald). Also according to this book Robbie Fowler made his name by scoring 5 against Ipswich rather than Fulham in the League cup.

Now spelling & historical facts aren't everything, but the other main disappointment was the lack of detail (Hillsborough, relationships with other players/managers etc.). Perhaps Hillsborough is too painful & has been covered by others but I thought he may have gone a little deeper with regards to how it affected him personallly

Overalll Ian comes across as a thoroughly nice guy, very level headed & perhaps too nice to write a book which reveals anything much that isn't already known.