There’s a kind of magic in the World Cup that’s hard to explain unless you’ve felt it yourself. Jonathan Wilson gets this. In "The Power and the Glory," he takes you by the hand and drops you into football’s greatest show. You feel the confusion of those first ragged tournaments, watch new football legends emerge, and sit with the sting of last-minute heartbreaks and the wild, unexpected moments that no one ever forgets. Wilson doesn’t just list facts—he tells stories, pulling you into the drama, the noise, and the moments that made the World Cup what it is today.
What really sets this book apart is the way Wilson digs into the mess behind the spectacle. He goes beyond the obvious, looking at the scandals, the flashes of genius, and the politics that always seem to follow the trophy. Every page shows how soccer and the World Cup are tangled up with the world’s bigger stories—wars, revolutions, and the slow march of social change. This isn’t just a record of matches; it’s a look at football as a mirror for everything happening far from the pitch.
Wilson’s writing doesn’t just inform; it transports you. You get the rush of a last-minute winner, the heartbreak of defeat, and the sense that these matches matter, not just to fans but to nations. The technical evolution of football is there, but so is the spirit that keeps people coming back, generation after generation.
If you care about football, even a little, this book gives you something real. Wilson’s stories remind you that behind every famous goal or crushing miss, there’s a world watching, hoping, and remembering."The Power and the Glory" isn’t just another book about soccer. It’s about what makes people tune in, why whole countries hold their breath, and the strange, simple way a game can turn millions of strangers into one roaring crowd.together. Wilson doesn’t write like a machine ticking off highlights; he gets under the skin of the sport and finds the thread that connects a last-minute goal in Rio to a kid kicking a ball in the park. This book is honest, sometimes raw, and always human. If you want to know why the World Cup matters—not just to players, but to millions everywhere—this is the story that will show you.together. Read it, and you’ll see the World Cup—and maybe the world itself—a little differently.
ROYAL MAIL TRACKED 48
Publisher: Visit Abacus Books
Published 7th May 2026
Paperback: £12.99, 608 pages
ISBN-13: 978-0349145730
Dimensions: 12.6 x 4 x 19.8 cm