
The Game at the End of the World
- SportSoccer
- Categories:Exercise & Fitness Essays, Poetry & Correspondence
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:
- Pages:216
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:(Unknown)
- Publication Place:United States
- Words:(Unknown)
- Star Ratings:
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Feature
★Juan Villoro has been translated and published in France, Germany, Italy, Portual and China.
Description
Soccer—or fútbol, as it is otherwise known—is more than a game. It is a form of connection. More than physicality, it is about strategy, creativity, and mental fortitude. It is a sport without an ideal all-around player and where crowds are crucial. Though the game consists of a 90-minute match, soccer is consistently in play, inspiring moves before the 90 minutes and continuing long after.
The Game at the End of the World explores the origins, highlights, and complexities of soccer. In this book, Villoro demonstrates how history and culture shaped a sport whose true significance goes beyond kicking balls into goals just in time for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
Author
Juan Villoro received his bachelor's degree in Sociology from the Metropolitan Autonomous University, Iztapalapa campus.[1] He was also part of a short story workshop conducted by Guatemalan writer Augusto Monterroso. As a rock music fan, he was the DJ for the radio program "El lado oscuro de la luna" (the Spanish translation of The Dark Side of the Moon by Pink Floyd) from 1977 until 1981.[2] He was then made the cultural attaché to Berlin in the then German Democratic Republic.
For three decades, Villoro has produced a steady output of articles for various Mexican periodicals, concentrating in such areas as sports, rock, cinema, literature and travel. Palmeras de la brisa rapida: un viaje a Yucatán ("Palm Trees of the Rapid Breeze: A Journey to Yucatan") 1989 is an account of his travels in a part of Mexico known for its Mayan culture.[3] His first novel was El disparo de argón ("The Shot of Argon"), published in 1991. Los once de la tribu ("The Eleven of the Tribe"), published in 1995, collects many of his best short, non-fiction essays and interviews.[4] The title refers to the number of people on an international football team. He covers a wide range of topics, including Andy Warhol, the Rolling Stones, the television series Dallas, the absurdities of publishing children's literature in the United States and an interview with Jane Fonda.
In 2011, Villoro appeared in the film production Guerrero 12, a feature-length documentary examining football fandom passion. The film is directed by Miguel A. Reina, who was also responsible for the Sundance film Un aliado en el tiempo.
In 2018 he received Chile's Manuel Rojas Ibero-American Narrative Award.