One Team In Tallinn

by


Formats

Softcover
$17.41
Softcover
$17.41

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 9/27/2007

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 194
ISBN : 9781425138240

About the Book

Kenny Bradley just wants to watch Scotland wherever they play football, along with his wee pal Gus McSween. Unfortunately for Kenny a nasty little posh Scot by the name of Atholl McClackit wants to stop Kenny going to Scotland games. Permanently.

On a journey through the 1998 world cup qualifiers held in Austria, Latvia and Estonia, Atholl tries to kill Kenny to ensure that he, Atholl, is the sole heir to the McClackit clan title. Kenny has no idea his real father is Dair McClackit, the perverted monarch of the glen or that his half brother is out to kill him.

What Atholl doesn't know is Kenny's father in law, Michael "Harold" MacMillan, is one of the hardest men in Glasgow. More importantly, Harold needs Kenny alive and well to help with the small matter of a jewel heist on the day of the Estonia v Scotland match, which is another thing Kenny knows nothing about. Kenny doesn't know the time of day never mind that all this mayhem is going on around him as Atholl attempts to ensure he is the next clan chief of the McClackits. As his pal Gus goes on a bender of epic proportions in the Baltics, Kenny stumbles on, picking his way round various corpses which appear as Atholl's attempts to kill him off are inadvertently thwarted by members of the Tartan Army.

Football, drink, sex and travel all come together in One Team in Tallinn, a trip to the Baltics with the Tartan Army you'll never forget.


About the Author

J Craig is a 46 year old self employed IT consultant living in London who spends a large amount of his hard earned cash following Scotland abroad. The rest he just squanders. He has been following Scotland abroad since the late 70s, having attended four World Cups and two European Championships supporting the national team. In the late 1990's he produced and edited a Scotland fanzine called "Haggis Supper", the demise of which, funnily enough, coincided with the arrival of Berti Vogts as Scotland manager.