|

£9.99
plus P&P
112
You
may download a 'Taster' of this novel by clicking one of the links
below.
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| ISBN: |
978-1-906085-14-8
|
| Publisher: |
Headhunter
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| Imprint: |
Headhunter
|
| Publication
date: |
26th
February 2009 |
| Published
in: |
Aldwick |
| Format: |
Paperback
|
| Pages:
|
250 |
| Height:
|
210 |
| Width: |
156
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My
latest book 'An Unlikely Fooligan' has just been published and is available
for purchase through this website. Copies will be personally signed by
myself and payment can be made securely using virtually any credit or
debit card. Anyone wishing to pay by Cheque or postal order please email
me first for details.
An autobiographical account my experience and feelings whilst being in
Japan.
It is a chronicle of two trips to Japan, the first being a week or so
before the World Cup in 2002 and the second trip being a year later. The
story is told through the experience of the second visit with reflections
of the trip a year earlier.
By
looking at another culture with no agenda but just a desire to have a
break, the traveller developed an awareness of his own society by comparing
it to Japan. Quite inadvertently the traveller’s idle musing took
an informal sociological perspective. The telling is not academic but
subjective with tongue firmly in cheek as feelings and observations are
recounted for the reader to share and hopefully enjoy. ‘Fooligan’
is a mispronunciation of the word given for the English football ‘hooligan.’
This unlikely fooligan makes his own way, but because of his physical
presentation he incurs the attention of the indigenous people who respond
to what the media have given and see him as one of the ‘fooligans’
that will be arriving for the world Cup. Yet this traveller is no fooligan
as he seeks out pastry shops and meets people of warmth and good humour,
being welcomed by the ordinary Japanese person, and even being sworn in
as a Girl Guide in a late night ceremony in a bar in Kyoto. In conclusion
the observer casts a look at his own society, evaluating methods of control,
dominant perceptions and the construction of prejudice, and he doesn’t
sit on the fence in giving his feelings to the way of things.
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