I first encountered the League in the US courtesy of public television, and was immediately hooked. I got the first series on DVD when it came out there, but it was never followed by anything else. I even saw the book in shops around then, but never picked it up. When I inexplicably moved to the UK, one of the first things I bought for my video library was the League box set. Since then, I've moved on to reading Jeremy Dyson's very entertaining and well-written books, so when I spotted a near-new copy of the Local Book in a charity shop (appropriately enough) for only a pound, I had to jump on it.
It took me only two days to read the entire book, so it's clearly not heavy reading. This is not an episode guide, behind-the-scenes tell-all, or even a history of the League. Instead, it's designed as a scrapbook by Local Shop-keeper Tubbs, compiled from scraps she's found out on the moors. As such, it tells a bit of extra history to many of the characters through newspaper articles, pamphlets, postcards and even diary pages. We're given further views of the intersections of the lives of Royston Vasey, and even some unsettling insights into its denizens. The design of the book is exquisite, beautifully 'recreating' all the bits of paper Tubbs has found, in all their myriad forms. If I had a single complaint about the book, it's that some of the print gets almost unreadably tiny; a larger format might have been nicer (I think the hard and soft bindings are the same size), but that's really just quibbling. I'd give the book 5 stars, but according to Goodreads that would mean it was 'amazing.' It wasn't that, but it was quite good.
This is required reading for any die-hard League fan, but I have to think it would be utterly pointless for the uninitiated.