
Back From the Brink: The Autobiography
Paul McGrath
The extraordinary and heartbreaking memoir from one of football's greatest players
Paul McGrath is Ireland's best loved sportsman and also its least understood. An iconic football presence during a professional career stretching over 14 years, he played for his country in the European Championship finals of 1988 and the World Cup finals of 1990 and 1994. But, behind the implied glamour of life in the employ of great English clubs like Manchester United and Aston Villa, McGrath wrestled with a range of destructive emotions that made his success in the game little short of miraculous.
That story has until now never been told. It is a story that runs from a hard, hidden childhood spent in Dublin's orphanages all the way to the pain of two marriage break-ups and the struggle to cope with life after football. Quite apart from his all too public struggle with alcoholism, the story runs through the surreal highs and calamitous lows of a life lived habitually on the edge of chaos.
It is not just a football story. It is an extraordinary human story that is certain to surprise with its candour.
Here, for the first time, read about the father he never met; the mother whose love never died; the routine loneliness and ritual bullying endured by a black kid growing up behind closed doors in 1960s Dublin; the emotional breakdown suffered on leaving that institution; the recovery that - remarkably - brought him all the way to Old Trafford; the rollercoaster ride that followed. Here, the guilt, fear, self-loathing are all laid bare in a story fired with hope and determination for the future.
It may well be the most candid sports book ever written.
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About Paul McGrath
Reviews for Back From the Brink: The Autobiography
Sean O'Hagan
The Observer Sport Monthly
Continuing the trend of brutal honesty which was popularised by Paul Gascoigne's autobiography, McGrath's book is difficult to read for anyone with an ounce of human kindness, especially those who marvelled at his ability from the Old Trafford terraces... Beautifully written.
Manchester Evening News
Laceratingly honest...remarkably unflinching
Mail on Sunday
A startling, harrowing read... far removed from the churn-em-out footballing autobiographies...This is an uncompromising tale, wonderfully told, about one of our most talented and disturbed sporting heroes.
Hugh Farrelly
Irish Independent
Heartbreaking...poingnant
Robert Philip
Daily Telegraph
One of the finest autobiographies to be written by a footballer... a roller-coaster ride of highs and lows, gain and loss, of loneliness, of fear, of self-loathing, and of guilt.
Birmingham Post
It is funny. It is sad. It is brilliant.
Hyder Jawad
Birmingham Post
The travails of Tony Adams, Paul Gascoigne and even George Best pale when compared with McGrath's horrors.
Paul Rowan
The Sunday Times
McGrath's book is voyeuristic and gruesome... sheds light on one of sport's last great taboos.
Rick Broadbent
The Times
Gripping [and] unflinching... His story is as complex as it is moving, as vulnerable as it is brutal.
Donald McRae
Guardian