It will be up Thursday mateIt takes far far too long to get a review up. This is just the kind of thing that makes one lose interest in writing here.
If I was to review all the books I wanted to, at this rate I may not live to see them on the site
Anyone have the books:
- Cricket from the Grandstand (Keith Miller)
- Walter Hammond a Biography by Ronald Mason
- MCC the Autobiography of a Cricketer - Colin Cowdrey
All brilliant reads
Well worth a read if you can get hold of itNah, TBH those books belong to my white grandfather a straight student of the game those 3 where the only ones along with one about Bradman that i ever got to read.
He could very well & have that Hammond book but i'll have to check.
I have Millers book and Cowdrey's autobiography.Anyone have the books:
- Cricket from the Grandstand (Keith Miller)
- Walter Hammond a Biography by Ronald Mason
- MCC the Autobiography of a Cricketer - Colin Cowdrey
All brilliant reads
Yeah 'What sport teaches us about life' is excellent, a really easy read, i finished it in one night.I've read Playing Hard Ball (probably the only book on baseball I'll ever read) and On and off the Field (which really ought to have a review here) but not his recent one. 'What sport teaches us about life' or something like that. Supposed to be very good though.
Gives us some more details mateA favourite book of mine, although not sure how great the general appeal of it would be (!), is "Cricket and the Law". Fascinating book, and for anyone who wants to see cricket in a novel light this would be it.
Yes. Most enjoyable, if a tittle unidimensional.By the way, Rodney, I presume, in your pursuit of the 1882 series literature, you do have The Birth of The Ashes by Christopher Hilton.
Enjoy.I am sure you have but just reminded as my copy from Amazon just arrived
Well it's a book written from a lawyer's perspective really. David Fraser is the author (a Professor of Law and Social Theory) and he looks at things such as bodyline, chucking, ball-tampering, sledging, walking, use of technology and other areas in a novel way. For Australians especially, the chapter on Mankading is superb.Gives us some more details mate
Well it's a book written from a lawyer's perspective really. David Fraser is the author (a Professor of Law and Social Theory) and he looks at things such as bodyline, chucking, ball-tampering, sledging, walking, use of technology and other areas in a novel way. For Australians especially, the chapter on Mankading is superb.
Now I'm a law student, so it really does appeal on that front, but I think it does have a much wider, general appeal. And like I said it is certainly a novel way of looking at things. It doesn't get too technical, and you don't need a great knowledge of law to understand the points he's making.
To give you a flavour of what I mean by novel (!) here's a little quote from the Foreword:
"Fraser is a relative newcomer to cricket. In 1988 while in Australia, he saw Australia play Pakistan and was fascinated by the umpire giving a batsman out lbw after the fielding side had appealed. His curiosity was immediately aroused by the fact that in this case the decision meant the umpire had to judge whether the ball would have hit the stumps, an event that had not occurred, but might have had the batsman's legs not got in the way. Putting on his lawyer's hat he thought this was very similar to the problematic area of causation in tort or criminal law, especially when dealing with the liability for an omission."
It's available on Amazon http://www.amazon.co.uk/Cricket-Law...=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1216340262&sr=8-3 that link also allows you to "search inside" the book, which is worth doing, it'll allow you to get a feel for it.
What was the SA one called?Oh yes, I have that. It was done in a limited edition deluxe version as well (I don't have that (yet!)). Also Goldman did one of the most dull books ever written "Cricketers and the Law" which is just a list (pretty much, literally) of English lawyers who have played cricket.
Imaginatively titled "South Africa's Cricketing Lawyers"What was the SA one called?