"Wilson is the game's pre-eminent popular historian."Observer (UK)
"So much of what we know of football's history we know thanks to Wilson, and he tells it so engagingly, with an eye for personality and story as well as the deeper structures. He sees the connections between football and everything else and is dazzlingly international. The game is lucky to have him."--Simon Kuper, co-author of Soccernomics
"There could be no better guide to the glory and the shame of the world's most popular sporting event than Jonathan Wilson, the world's most accomplished soccer writer."--Stefan Szymanski, co-author of Soccernomics
"A history of the World Cup that is also a four yearly temperature check on the history of the entire world. Epic in scope, awesomely rich in detail, and compulsively entertaining."--Tom Holland, co-host, The Rest Is History
"Meticulously researched and well-organised--an informative account of how the World Cup became the global event it is today."--Jamie Carragher, former player, Liverpool FC
"The Power and the Glory: A fantastic ride through World Cup history. Legendary players, unforgettable matches, and the politics that surround the game on the global stage."--Bob Bradley, soccer manager
"A treasure trove of tales that explain why [the World Cup] becomes a global obsession every four years....As in his previous dozen books on the world game, Wilson's eye for detail shines through."--Irish Times
"A magisterial 600-page history of the World Cup from its conception in the 1920s to the present, [The Power and the Glory] is perhaps the definitive account of the world's greatest sporting festival."--Literary Review (UK)
"The first serious history of the tournament in English since Brian Glanville's Story of the World Cup, published in 1980. In the near half-century since then, the greater depth of global football scholarship, and easy access to old video, has allowed Wilson to offer an infinitely more detailed account and one considerably richer in political and cultural context than its predecessor."--New Statesman (UK)
"Brilliant...exhaustively researched, full of fascinating tidbits and personal backstories that flesh out the main theme without neglecting the nuts and bolts of what happened on the field."--Irish Independent