SPORTS BOOK OF THE WEEK
Darkness And Light: My Story by Joe Thompson with Alex Fenn (published 2018)
Continuing our classic sports book series…
The basic story arc underpinning many sporting biographies is so repetitive, you wonder how some of them get published. Such criticism cannot, however, be levelled at Thompson’s Darkness And Light, co-authored by Fenn.
Thompson is still a young man and his searingly honest account of how a teenager who appeared to have the football world at his feet was, in the space of a decade, released by Man United, recruited and playing (well) in the lower leagues, at which point he contracted the first of two bouts of cancer, is biography at its best.
That Thompson is alive is testament to his tenacity, courage and wonderfully positive attitude, attributes inherited from his mother, yet not once does Thompson give the impression that he feels sorry for himself. That he continued to play professional football until 2019 after scoring a fairy-tale winner to keep Rochdale in League One, is miraculous.
If the sign of an engaging read is measured by the speed with which you’re suddenly well over halfway through a book, then Darkness And Light qualifies as one of the year’s best. We don’t learn of Thompson’s diagnosis until we’re more than a third of the way through, thanks to a pacy narrative which expertly blends the perfect quantity of football-speak with generous helpings of behind-thescenes anecdote.
As a youngster at Old Trafford, Thompson felt he was en route to the top, watching in awe as the likes of Giggs and Scholes practised their shooting. But he suffered rejection following a slowdown in the rate at which he grew, a setback seemingly confirmed by a hand scan which suggested he would never be taller than 5’10”. The scan proved inaccurate, but Thompson soldiered on, becoming a YTS trainee at Rochdale, the club that would give him his first professional contract.
Throughout his career, Thompson, though small, clearly looked after himself, physically-speaking, which makes the revelation regarding his Hodgkin Lymphoma, a cancer of the blood, so shocking. Following his diagnosis, Thompson’s tenacity, allied to a deep love for his family, played a huge part in his recovery. It seems inconceivable that this decent, hardworking guy could later suffer from cancer for a second time, but he does and survives it. Still a young man, his pro days over, Thompson has developed a second career as an accomplished motivational speaker; in an extremely crowded market, one suspects that Thompson is one of the genre’s very best.