Living on the Volcano
The Secrets of Surviving as a Football Manager
- Published: 13 August 2015
- ISBN: 9781473506787
- Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 464
Arguably the greatest asset of Michael Calvin’s previous, award-winning book The Nowhere Men was its human insight into a shadowy, under-appreciated world. The trials and tribulations of scouting were vividly portrayed through interviews with figures unaccustomed to the limelight... What Living on the Volcano does so brilliantly, is pick up the recurring threads. The ‘band of brothers’ mentality that emerges is built on a mutual world of uncertainty, frustration, and ‘recurrent rejection and renewal’. Each chapter is cleverly connected to the next to reflect the fluid nature of the managerial merry-go-round… As a series of individual portraits, Living on the Volcano may seem like a book to dip in and out of. However, in doing so, there’s a danger of missing the power of the overall narrative. Bookended by former Torquay manager Martin Ling’s emotional story, this is a book about people and what it takes to do their intoxicating and exhausting job. Just as with The Nowhere Men, Calvin gets to the personal core of an impersonal industry
Of Pitch and Page
The honesty in Living on the Volcano suggests that in an era of anodyne press conferences where so many managers speak a lot while saying little, giving fans an occasional glimpse of these feelings might be no bad thing
The Guardian
Calvin’s book takes us into many enthralling areas. It is especially strong on the nuts and bolts of ambition. And how ambition often sits uneasily alongside dreams… superb
Irish Examiner
an illuminating new book...vivid journey on what it is really is to be a football manager
Independent
a remarkable insight into the often hopelessly neurotic world of those in charge of a professional football dressing-room… The book conveys a fragile side of management most often kept obscured. Its real beauty is that it deals with people, not caricatures
Irish Independent
the narrative of Ling’s decline forms a vivid part of the superb new book which seeks to understand, like never before, the interior mind and challenges of a football manager. Mike Calvin’s Living on the Volcano reaches way beyond the standard press conference propaganda
Independent
Brilliant stuff
FourFourTwo Magazine
a remarkable insight into what makes these men [football managers] tick, or in some cases, tic. Stress, insomnia, paranoia, depression with a dash of ego, a dollop of insecurity and there you have it … one volatile cocktail. Calvin is an exquisite writer but he is also a "proper" journalist. If a manager wants to keep talking, thus revealing far more than he perhaps intended, Calvin sits back and allow the dictaphone to take the strain then lets the quotes run.
Sports Journalist Association
I am quite sure that football fans would be more patient and have a better understanding of the problems and pressures that managers face every day if they took the time to read Mike Calvin’s fascinating and illuminating new book
BFC Talk
The book's greatest achievement is in making managers look human - people just like you, your father, your son or your husband. It is a melancholy book, about the death of dreams and idealism. But it is also uplifting, because it shows how difficult it is to extinguish a fiery spirit.
When Saturday Comes
revealing and enjoyable… a memorable book
Sunday Express
a book you need to read if you want to understand football
Soccer Issue
For any football fan with the belief that football isn’t quite as simple as the average fan on the street believes this is a fascinating read, and if your football role is on the other side of the touchline or on the training pitch, this book gives an insight rarely available.
Each Game As It Comes
an eye-raising insight into the realities of life in the dugout
The Times
The brilliance of Calvin’s book is to reveal that managers, whether vilified or revered, have a vulnerable side. They might have a particularly thick skin, but they’re fragile and fallible too. This book will leave you with a much greater appreciation for the work they do. Behind the team-talks, the press-conference meltdowns, the club statements and departures by mutual consent, there are complex characters working in an incredibly pressurised, often hostile environment. Managers are more than scapegoats or miracle workers – this heartening, harrowing book gives them a human face.
Sport Magazine
Living on the Volcano is another astonishingly strong book from the author of Familyand The Nowhere Men. Mike Calvin has once again reached heights with his sports writing which seems to be unfair on his peers. His ability to gain access to the people who really count is phenomenal and ensures once again that Living on the Volcano is a triumph. The chapters which focus on the lower league managers are for me the strongest as we hear from men who don’t often make the headlines. I for one can’t wait for what Mike does next.
Matt Gardiner sports bookseller at Waterstones and founder of Manchester Football Writing Festival
If were to pick my favourite read for the year I would have to go for Michael Calvin’s Living on the Volcano. This dissection of football manager, thanks to the experiences of famous and less well known managers, puts into focus the reality of football management. Although I was never under the illusion that it is as easy a job as many seem to think that it is, there were passages in this book that still took me by surprise.
Paul Grech, author of Il Re Calcio: Stories From Italian Football
It comes as no surprise to say the most enjoyable football book I’ve read in 2015 was Living on the Volcanoby Michael Calvin. It has become rather expected of Calvin to deliver such brilliance packed in to a small space, but he has done so once again with this superb reading of football managers. He isn’t afraid to scrutinise when he sees best, and also gives a number of different interviews with the Premier League’s top coaches. These managers do, however unfortunate, keep to a very stylised and cliché based response which might hamper the true feel of the book, but the writing is what I came for and it didn’t disappoint.
George Rinaldi, English and Italian football writer and author of the upcoming Calcio’s Greatest Forwards
in-depth interviews with football managers build an authoritative picture of what it is like to work in [the football management] world
Huw Richards, Guardian - Sport books of the year
The best books have tension at the heart of them. Sometimes resolved, sometimes not. This book is a walk through the terrible, awful, insanely stressed, deeply unhealthy world of English football management alongside the men who love it more than anything in the world. There is a completely intractable tension driving it, that of men trapped in a fatal attraction because the only job they want to do just happens to be one of the worst jobs imaginable. It makes for a fantastic book, albeit one whose most compelling parts are almost macabre. Calvin keeps himself out of the way and lets the managers spill their guts so there are long tranches of quotes, giving the book a confessional and even intimate feel
Irish Times
Living on the Volcano by Michael Calvin is a revealing, often disturbing look at football manager’s lives in the modern era… The dugout should carry a health warning
Henry Winter, The Times (Books of the Year)
Brilliant study of football managers. Superb.
Daily Mail
Calvin's Living on the Volcano is possibly the best study in the harsh realities of life as a football manager you are likely to find in any book [...] Calvin provides access and insight into a much-talked-about but little-understood profession and its unique pressure [...] Both gripping and empathetic, the book goes behind the cliches, myths and public fronts to provide portraits of real people experiencing the highs, lows and ruthlessness of life in the dugout.
Arsenal World
The most enjoyable football book I’ve read in 2015 was Living on the Volcano by Michael Calvin. It has become rather expected of Calvin to deliver such brilliance packed in to a small space, but he has done so once again with this superb reading of football managers. He isn’t afraid to scrutinise when he sees best, and also gives a number of different interviews with the Premier League’s top coaches.
George Rinaldi, Of Pitch & Page, Best Football Books of 2015
Another astonishingly strong book from the author of "Family" and "The Nowhere Men". Mike Calvin has once again reached heights with his sports writing which seems to be unfair on his peers. His ability to gain access to the people who really count is phenomenal and ensures once again that "Living on the Volcano" is a triumph
Matt Gardiner, Of Pitch & Page, Best Football Books of 2015
If I were to pick my favourite read for the year I would have to go for Michael Calvin’s Living on the Volcano. This dissection of football manager, thanks to the experiences of famous and less well known managers, puts into focus the reality of football management. Although I was never under the illusion that it is as easy a job as many seem to think that it is, there were passages in this book that still took me by surprise.
Paul Grech, Of Pitch & Page, Best Football Books of 2015
Living on the Volcano by Michael Calvin is a revealing, often disturbing look at football manager’s lives in the modern era… the dugout should carry a health warning
Henry Winter, The Times (Books of the Year)