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Mirror Book Club: Blowing The Bloody Doors Off And Other Lessons In Life by Michael Caine


It’s time to share readers’ thoughts on the latest Mirror Book Club read…

Blowing The Bloody Doors Off And Other Lessons In Life

Michael Caine

The legendary actor shares everything he’s learned during 60 years of highs and lows since his film debut.

He has earned two Oscars and made undisputed classics from Get Carter to The Italian Job and here he extols old-fashioned virtues such as hard work, punctuality, learning your craft and respecting others.

He illustrates his point with entertaining anecdotes and pays affectionate tribute to the people who have meant most to him, from Laurence Olivier to Jack Nicholson.

His love for his family shines like a beacon and he also writes movingly about the challenges of ageing.

This is a little thin compared to previous Caine memoirs but there is enough charm and wit to make it thoroughly engaging.

BY ALLAN HUNTER

Hodder & Stoughton, £8.99

Available for £8.99

The Spy And The Traitor

Ben McIntyre

The popular historian tells the story of Oleg Gordievsky, the KGB colonel who was Russia’s top man until 1973 when he began covertly working for MI6.

Did he switch sides because he saw the Western light or because he was an attention seeker?

Although our spy lacks an engaging personality, you can rely on Macintyre to tease out the fascinating details.

BY JOHN LEWIS-STEMPEL

Penguin, £8.99

How To Be A Footballer

Peter Crouch

Former England striker Crouch casts a wry eye over the “strangest, funniest, most baffling world” of football and its players.

There are outlandish outfits and tattoo sleeves, bizarre rituals and mind-boggling extravagances.

He’s relatively indiscreet, pokes gleeful fun at himself and shares thoughtful insights. But, above all, he’s hilarious with endless laugh-out-loud anecdotes.

BY CHARLOTTE HEATHCOTE

Ebury Press, £8.99

Hilarious with endless laugh-out-loud anecdotes

Erebus: The Story Of A Ship

Michael Palin

Everyone’s favourite Python tells the story of Erebus in his cheery prose style. The iron-clad warship voyaged far into Antarctica but is best remembered as the vessel that made a doomed search for the Northwest Passage, the holy grail of Victorian exploration.

It was trapped by ice in 1846 and the crew sought in vain to stay alive by eating each other.

BY JOHN LEWIS-STEMPEL

Arrow, £8.99

In A House Of Lies

Ian Rankin

The skeleton of a private detective who disappeared a decade ago is discovered amid evidence that the investigating cops were incompetent at best, or corrupt and even complicit at worst.

And that includes Rebus.

The retired detective also has fun baiting his old nemesis Big Ger Cafferty, the terrifying godfather of Edinburgh crime. An enjoyable, emotionally compelling novel.

BY JAKE KERRIDGE

Orion, £7.99

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