Same Player Shoots Again
A Biography of the Pinball Machine
Andreas Bernard author Valentine A Pakis translator
Format:Hardback
Publisher:John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Published:16th Jan '26
Should be back in stock very soon
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£9.99(9781509569441)

This is an ode to the lost golden age of the pinball machine. These vivid, flashing portals of entertainment were mainstays of nearly every bar, pub, and amusement arcade from the 1960s to the 1990s, but today they have all but disappeared. Andreas Bernard, looking back on his coming of age as an avid pinballer, reflects on what the disappearance of pinball machines tells us about the modern transformation of leisure time and public spaces.
The demise of pinballing at the end of the 1990s converged with huge social shifts which eroded the distinction between work and leisure. Now we use the same screen to organize both work and leisure, and games have been absorbed by a professionalization of daily life that is impossible to escape. Is our free time, as we know it, really free? Bernard also shows how the replacement of pinball machines by pocket-sized vessels of distraction was accompanied by the ebbing away of social critique.
At times nostalgic and lighthearted and at others bitingly astute, this book will appeal to all pinballers, past and present, and to anyone interested in the changing world of culture, gaming, and entertainment.
"Part memoir, part cultural history, Same Player Shoots Again beautifully evokes a lost world through a single object. It offers an illuminating window on that strange and unknown land, the very recent past."
Joe Moran, Liverpool John Moores University
"Charming... often poignant... Reading this book was like my experience of playing pinball: it was all over much too quickly."
Will Wiles, LiteraryReview
"Touchingly Proustian... Bernard's genius is to communicate something of his life's grand obsession, while recognising how pinball machines are emblematic of an industrial culture that was slain by digital in the 1980s."
Stuart Jeffries, The Spectator
ISBN: 9781509569434
Dimensions: 222mm x 143mm x 18mm
Weight: 255g
112 pages