Books – Celtic: Changing Faces (2013)

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Details

Title: Celtic: Changing Faces
Author:
Paul Lunney
Published: 28 Mar 2013

SynopsisBooks - Celtic: Changing Faces (2013) - Pic

Paul Lunney has been a devoted follower of Scottish football creating a vast archive of images and anecdotes.

In this book he weaves a wonderful tapestry of imagery of players who have done so much for the club in its 124-year history. Celtic have won the Scottish League Championship on 43 occasions, most recently in the 2011-12 season, the Scottish Cup 35 times and the Scottish League Cup 14 times.

In 1967 Celtic won an unprecedented quintuple: not only becoming the first British team to win the European Cup but also winning the Scottish League Championship, the Scottish Cup, the Scottish League Cup, and the Glasgow Cup. Celtic also reached the 1970 European Cup Final, and the 2003 UEFA Cup Final.

This book encapsulates some of the glory by featuring star players down the ages.

Review

Celtic – Changing Faces, by Paul Lunney

Review here (with pics): http://theshamrockglasgow.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/celtic-changing-faces-by-paul-lunney-a-review/

The new book by accomplished Celtic author and football historian Paul Lunney is a fascinating pictorial review of the club’s first 125 years. Here you will find the earliest Celtic team photos through to the latest and players ranging from Darlin’ Willie Groves and Johnny Campbell, among Celtic’s earliest stars, to Paul Elliott and Scott Brown from the current era. In just under a hundred pages you are transported through monochrome and sepia to full blown colour as the early green and white stripes give way to the now famous Hoops, Celtic Park expands in the backgrounds and the trophies begin to pile up.

On the face of it, a book consisting of a stream of photos of one football club through the ages shouldn’t really be that interesting. But this captures developments in the game and wider society, as the author himself says: “from the black and white Victorian early days right through to the modern era of glorious colour we can observe the many changes in football fashion and facial appearance. From the heavy jerseys, long pants and cumbersome boots of 1888 to the slick and stream-lined styles of today’s strips and footwear, the contrasts are certainly striking. Likewise we see how faces differ over the passing decades.”
One familiar face which certainly does change over time quite dramatically is that of Willie Maley – pictured in the first ever Celtic team photo of late 1888 as a young man with a fine moustache and then through almost every season, ageing with the turn of each page, until we finally see him sitting, still an impressive physical specimen, next to Jimmy Delaney and the Scottish Cup winning team of 1937. And that’s where the attraction lies with this book. These pages are golden Celtic history, each telling a story of a player or a manager or a team at a specific time, easy to access and to contrast with earlier and older times.

The photos come from newspaper libraries as well as the author’s own impressive collection. The quality of them is generally faultless. Some of the early colourised photos are simply glorious – Alec McNair and Jimmy Quinn being particular stand-outs. The identities of reserve players and backroom staff will spark some debate, especially from the heavy 40 plus squads of the 80s and 90s. Pictures of the players out of ‘uniform’ and away from the park are among the most fascinating. There are a handful of photos which will appear new to most fans although the majority will likely have been seen before, if not as well packaged as they are here.

The developing styles and appearances of the team photos will likely attract the most interest. We all have our own favourite era – often the one closely associated with our youth following Celtic – and this book provides an instant opportunity to compare and contrast players from different periods in time. Patsy Gallacher and Lubo Moravcik – who’d have taken the corners? Jimmy Quinn v Bobo Balde – that would provide a competitive edge to training. Charlie Shaw and Peter Latchford – why does one look sturdy while the other manages to look overweight? The angelic Dan Doyle and the curly-heided Roy Aitken – was innocence ever so out of place? And then you see a picture of the recently-departed Bobby Collins, fooling about, young and carefree, and you’re reminded that these are men with lives, families and stories of their own beyond the Celtic Story. And you feel gratitude for all their efforts.

This book is more than a wander down the Memory Lane sandwiched somewhere between the Gallowgate and London Road. It acts as a reminder of good times, bad times and great times but there’s more to it than that. There are some faces here – and some away jerseys especially – that you’d rather not remember. Yet there’s also lots between the covers to fuel discussion, quizzical enquiries and heated arguments about the contrasting features of the major Celtic eras of success.

Paul Lunney has done another impressive job in reviewing Celtic’s history through the use of compelling and often brilliant imagery. ‘Changing Faces’ will grab the attention of fans both young and old for different reasons. A good buy at £12.99, it will be welcome across the threshold of any Celtic-minded home where the history of ‘the bould bhoys’ is cherished.

The Shamrock rating: 7/10

Product Details

  • Paperback: 96 pages
  • Publisher: Fonthill Media (28 Mar 2013)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1781550824
  • ISBN-13: 978-1781550823
  • Product Dimensions: 23.5 x 16.5 x 0.9 cm

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