More Than a Game: The Story of Cricket's Early Years

ClanBrandon Books
view more info on this item
click here for more details, find new or used items

John Major

Our price £5.01 (£9.99)
New from £3.87
Used from £5.11

Pages: 400 (Paperback)

ISBN: 0007183658

Pub: HarperPerennial

Pub date: 2008-04-01

Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 37810

Check for 3rd party sellers (new/used)

Reader Reviews:


4/5 stars

Not quite as good as expected (0/0 people found this helpful)

The quality of the research and the insight and love of cricket are evident, you can almost hear for better or worse John speaking when reading it. I did enjoy the book but feel some sections were a bit of a slog. This is mainly due to the organisation and editing. The book is not a chronological history but instead discrete chapters e.g The Missionry.., Round Arm rebellion. I was struggling after to reconstruct in my mind when all events took place across the book. It also can lead to some jumping around. One paragrpah 1870 the next 1900 with no date reference. It just makes the big picture harder to picture and it can also seem like repetition.

4/5 stars

Surprisingly good (0/0 people found this helpful)

Anyone who read John Major's autobiography and found parts of it a little stodgy and hard going will be pleasantly surprised at the light touch he shows here.

He traces the early history of cricket, concentrating on the personalities, but also placing them into the wider context to show how social change in the country (and world) at large was reflected in cricket.

There are times when he seems to have half an eye on the assiduously pedantic cricket statistician and goes to great lengths to "show his workings" in order to back up what he is saying, but the book is shot through with a great sense of the author's enthusiasm.

5/5 stars

And not a jelly bean in sight...... (0/0 people found this helpful)

The point of this book is that no-one is really sure where cricket began. It is largely accepted to have started in a recognisable form in the early eighteenth century and from then it has been constantly metamorphisizing into the game we know and love. Before I read this I had never heard of "single wicket" cricket, played until the mid-19th Century but it would be intriguing to see such a match today between, say Andrew Flintoff and Andrew Symonds. Some of the facets of the game taken for granted today took years of controversey to develop: overarm bowling, leg pads (allowed only after one player suffered horrendous leg injuries) and three-stump wickets. Some of the characters are given, sometimes lengthy, pen-portraits: WG Grace, Fry, Trumper obviously, but also some the early pioneers, Mynn, Felix, Beldham and "Lumpy" Stevens. The early administrators of the game probably wouldn't look out of place in the MCC today, Lords Harris and Hawke being both paternalistic and dictatorial at the same time. This really is a page tuner for anyone interested in the game and an absolute must for anyone disenchanted with the current fashion for cheerleaders, rock music and sledging which has destroyed so much of the game's appeal.

5/5 stars

Enjoyable (0/0 people found this helpful)

Very Enjoyable purchase! I enjoyed reading this, even if the plot's somewhat rushed. Although there's a feeling that the text is there simply to fill up the spaces between the illustrations, there are enough laugh out loud moments and classic Pratchett twists to make it work.

3/5 stars

Affectionate, but rambling (0/0 people found this helpful)

I picked this book off the shelf more out of curiosity about the author (of whom I am an admirer) than for any special love or knowledge of cricket - and then found myself immersed in the history of the game. The book is full of amusing anecdotes and interesting insights, and I felt I got right inside Sir John Major's mind. But the book could have done with a firmer hand on the editing, in my opinion. It is rather rambling and self indulgent in places, and there were definitely places where some trimming would have been beneficial.

Similar Products

Test Match Special - 50 Not Out: The Official History of a National Sporting Treasure

Fatty Batter: How Cricket Saved My Life (Then Ruined It)

Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2008 (Wisden)

Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2007

William Wilberforce: The Life of the Great Anti-Slave Trade Campaigner

Categories

Amazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:

Books -> Subjects -> Sports, Hobbies & Games -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Sports, Hobbies & Games -> Reference -> History of Sports
Books -> Subjects -> Sports, Hobbies & Games -> General AAS
Books -> Subjects -> Sports, Hobbies & Games -> Cricket -> General AAS
Books -> Subjects -> History -> General
Books -> Subjects -> History -> General AAS
Books -> Subjects -> History -> Social & Economic History -> General AAS
Books -> Special Features -> Regular Stores -> Paperback Deals
Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English
Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin)
Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback
Books -> Refinements -> Condition (condition-type)

 

ClanBrandon Books | Prague airport transfer | Dreamweaver | Short Term Missions | English Teacher Jobs in the Czech Republic
Czech Republic | Operation Mobilisation | Czech Republic Map