About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 36. Chapters: Arthur Haliburton, 1st Baron Haliburton, Barbara Cooper (RAF officer), Bill Glennie, Brody Bishop, Cary Cooper, Cory Doctorow, Craig Campbell (comedian), David Nixon (choreographer), David Reddaway, Diana Luke, Dina Rabinovitch, Donald Macmaster, Elliot Grove, Frank Ormond Soden, Gib Hutchinson, Greg Rusedski, Griselda Pollock, Isabelle Lucas, Jane Birdwood, Baroness Birdwood, John Philip Newell, Kara Scott, Kevin Conway (ice hockey), Lily Kwan, Linda Papadopoulos, Lionel Blair, Louis de Soissons, Neil McCallum (actor), Nigel Whitmey, Paul Maxwell, Paul Peschisolido, Philip Pasterfield, Phil Jackson (rugby league born 1932), Richard Williams (animator), Roxanne McKee, Roy Halpin, Samantha Albert, Sarah Thornton, Shannon Hope, Sydney Checkland, Tim Howar, Todd Swift, Tom Stade, Tyler Brule. Excerpt: Paolo Pasquale Peschisolido (born 25 May 1971), commonly known as Paul Peschisolido, is a Canadian association football manager and former player. Peschisolido was manager of English League Two club Burton Albion from May 2009 until March 2012, when he was sacked following a poor-run of games which left his side 17th in the league. A former striker, Peschisolido began his career in the Canadian Soccer League with the Toronto Blizzard and played in the Major Indoor Soccer League with the Kansas City Comets before moving to England. Over 16 seasons he scored 118 goals from 447 appearances in the Football League, playing for nine different clubs: Birmingham City, Stoke City, West Bromwich Albion, Fulham, Queens Park Rangers, Sheffield United, Norwich City, Derby County and Luton Town. Peschisolido represented his country from under-16 level upwards, making his senior debut for the Canadian national team in 1992. He went on to play 53 times for Canada, scoring 10 goals, in a 12-year senior international career. Born in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada, Peschisolido began his professional playing career when still a high-schooler with Archbishop Denis O'Connor Catholic High School in Ajax. He led the team to OFSAA finals in his last year then moved on as a trainee with the Toronto Blizzard of the Canadian Soccer League, where he was named the "Rookie of the Year" in 1989. He also played the 1990 91 Major Indoor Soccer League season with the Kansas City Comets, being named the league's 'Newcomer of the Year'. After spending a year with the Juventus academy, returning homesick saw him offered the opportunity from his former national youth team coach Tony Taylor to join Birmingham City for 25,000 in November 1992. He was joint top scorer in each of his two seasons with the club. In August 1994, he moved on to Stoke City in a 400,000 plus player exchange deal involving Dave Regis. He was top scorer with 15 goals for the 1994 95 season, and remained at Stoke until March 1996, w