Got this book for Christmas and read it in a day.
For Everton, Bolton and Sunderland fans especially, this is a great, easy read. It´s a straight-ahead, talkative, funny walk through Peter´s life - peppered with some great jokes, memories and anecdotes. There´s some interesting stuff here, too, on the Mexico ´86 World Cup.
What´s most impressive now is the way Reid managed to have such a long, successful playing career, given the amount of serious injuries he suffered early on.
His ethos can be summed up as - work hard, play hard, be dead straight and get what you want - and he lived (and lives) that now.
I´ll admit to a (happy) tear in the eye during that amazing run up to the Wembley Cup Final of 1984 and the season - seasons, really, but the next season was "the one" - that followed. Kendall´s Everton team was a just that, a "team" and from a distance - maybe I´m just getting bloody old - you realise just how important it all was and how much joy football can bring to people. I remembered where I was for every match.
Interesting little link for Everton fans, too: a certain Sam Allardyce is one of Reid´s best football pals and drinking buddies, so features a lot in the book.
Right at the end there´s a section about how Peter lived, especially when he was at Sunderland, in a house in the area while his wife and children stayed in the family home. One day I´d like to read a biography about that - the effect of a footballer´s life on their family and close ones as it really sounds like a tough part of what can be a very tough career. But obviously the names and memories sell and that´s what we get here.
This sits nicely on the shelf with Sharpie´s and Nev´s books - although my favourite is still Mark Ward´s.