BOOK REVIEWS
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Our George/Memories of George Best | Our George/Memories of George Best |
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Reviewed by Joyce Woolridge
This book begins where the second cannot go – to Best’s bedside in the Cromwell Hospital where he died – and there is an unvarnished and harrowing account of the pain Best and those who stayed with him went through before his artificial ventilator was switched off. It is a very personal memoir, full of the small, intimate details that only family would know. There are facsimiles of the first letters he sent home and the story of how his parents lay crying in bed as their eldest went off to Manchester to seek his fortune. There are also considerable gaps in the narrative. As can happen, the Bests had little contact with George once he became a big star, although Barbara rebuilt her relationship with her brother later. This is not a football book, but the George Best remembered in its pages is a flesh-and-blood character, an ordinary person with an extraordinary talent, one that, after reading it, you think you understand. On the subject...
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Our George: Family Memoir of George Best
Memories of George Best
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