I've always thought of obituaries in much the same way as funerals.
When the person writing or speaking knew the subject, they tend
to be more sincere, worthwhile and pertinent than when they are basing
their words on second or third hand information.
As the
editor, Martin Smith, points out in his foreword to this book, obituary notices
until the mid-1980s were largely staid and dry, in the fashion of the
times. You got a brief resume of the major career milestones and facts
about the subject, but little that put flesh onto the bones as a good
writer can do so well.
This collection of obituary
notices from the pages of the Daily Telegraph is of cricketers who died from
the start of that more descriptive period to the modern day and it is as
fine a collection of writers and styles as you could wish for, Michael
Henderson, Scyld Berry, E.W.Swanton, Tony Lewis, Simon Hughes and
Michael Parkinson are all here, the writing almost - and that's quite a
feat - as good as the cricket of their subjects.
All
but one is effusive in its praise of the talents of the players
concerned, the exception being Simon Hughes' piece on Sylvester Clarke,
who he describes as the 'fastest, nastiest fast bowler who ever lived'
and goes on to explain why. I suppose anyone who leaves you 'two
millimetres of man-made fibre from death' has that kind of effect on
you.
It is fine writing though, as is John Major's
appreciation of Denis Compton, 'an Olympian of cricket'. There are
numerous fine stories and the subjects are some of the
greatest players and characters to set foot on a cricket ground, together with some of
its finest characters. Perhaps the latter have the greater charm, such
as reading how Bryan 'Bomber' Wells once bowled an over in the time it
took the Worcester Cathedral clock to strike 12. When told by his
captain that he was making the game look ridiculous and ordered to
start his run from eight paces, rather than two, he did - but bowled the
ball - on a length, mind - from well behind the stumps after taking only two...
Mark
Nicholas' piece on Malcolm Marshall is a joy, the former Hampshire
captain recounting how wicket-keeper Bobby Parks stood 31 paces back to
him one day at Portsmouth, while Derbyshire fans will especially enjoy
the piece on Eddie Barlow, who Charles Fortune once described as
'running up to bowl, looking like an unmade bed'. Those who saw 'Bunter'
in action will enjoy that description as much as I did.
There is also an obituary for Derbyshire legend Les Jackson, who Donald Bradman felt one of the best bowlers he had faced in 1948, yet scandalously played only two Test matches in the next 13 years. His thirteen-pace run may have ended in a round-arm sling, but it took hundreds of wickets and saw him considered, in the words of Tom Graveney, 'the best bloody bowler in the country'.
In
a book of such memorable writing, it could have been hard to have a
favourite, but the inclusion of Michael Parkinson's outstanding piece on
the former Derbyshire all-rounder George Pope makes this an easy
decision for me. For years I had the press-cutting in a folder and now
it serves as the concluding piece in a remarkable collection of writing.
Emphasising
my opening comments about the best writing coming from those who knew
the subject, the Yorkshire broadcaster produced three pages of golden
text about 'a man who a generation of cricketers will testify was the
best bowler they ever faced'.
'I could bowl out England
on this track' he would tell his league team, before going out with
them to to take another six, seven or eight wickets with a bamboozling
array of inswing, outswing, off-cutters and leg-cutters. A 'master of
his craft' indeed.
Quite a character and bowler, George
Pope, and quite a remarkable book. Aurum Press deserve every success
with it and it should be a fixture on the bedside or coffee table of
every cricket fan. Thanks to Jessica for the special offer for blog readers, which I would heartily recommend you take up.
The Promise of Endless Summer: Cricket Lives from the Daily Telegraph is published by Aurum Press.
To order a copy (9781781310489) for £11.99 including p&p, telephone 01903 828503 or email mailorders@lbsltd.co.uk, and quote offer code AUR349. Alternatively, send
a cheque made payable to: Littlehampton Book Services Mail Order
Department, Littlehampton Book Services, PO Box 4264, Worthing, West
Sussex BN13 3RB. Please quote the offer code AUR349 and include your name and address details.
*UK ONLY - Please add £2.50 if ordering from overseas
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please remember to add your name. Avoid personal comment at all times. Thanks!