I gave this four stars, I was tempted to give it three but, I read it quick enough. So I did enjoy it. It isn't a chronological tale of events it's a collection of interviews that Andy Mitten has done over the years. He writes for (maybe started) the fanzine 'United We Stand'. This indicates where Mitten himself stands. He's a United fan. That's the strength, and perhaps the weakness, of the book.
The range of interviewees is very impressive. Clearly they know, like, and respect him. He writes well, although I was a little confused on occasion about who was speaking; either Andy himself, the player heading the chapter, or another player in passing. But I could usually figure it out.
One problem here is that the players often refer to their team-mates via their nicknames. It's a phenomenon common among schoolboys. It's rather irritating. Imagine he was interviewing the Trumpton fire brigade. The players wouldn't refer to 'Hugh, Pugh, Barney McGrew, Cuthbert, Dibble, and Grub'. They'd say 'Hughsie, Puggo, Bazzoh, Cuthy, Dribble, and Grubbo'. It's embarrassing but they're footballers, not philosophers.
As a series of interviews the story doesn't really have a beginning or an end. It's a series of clips of the same period(ish) from different perspectives. Of course, it was a hell of a period of success. Dominant in the UK, less so in the Champions League. As I say, I liked it. But, I'm a United fan, so I'd take that with a pinch of salt.