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Sweet Summers
The Classic Cricket Writing of JM Kilburn
- Author:
- By Duncan Hamilton (Editor)
- Format:
- Hardback
- Availability:
- In print, usually dispatched within 3-4 days.
- Price:
- £16.99
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Further Details
- Published: 1st Jul 2008
- ISBN: 1905080468
- Pages: 448
- Size: 235mm x 150mm
From Word of Sport:
As correspondent of the Yorkshire Post, Kilburn wrote lovingly about the game for almost 40 years. His elegant style delighted fans and captured perfectly the eclectic nature of the game. Many of his essays are featured here along with a biography of the man and contributions from leading cricket writers. Edited by Duncan Hamilton, winner of the 2007 William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award.
From the Publisher:
As modern day cricket stumbles from one controversy to the next, this book is superbly timed to capture the nation's longing for a return to simpler, more noble times when the true spirit of cricket existed. Through Kilburn's writing, some of the game's past legends are brought to life among them: Donald Bradman, Fred Trueman, Jack Hobbs, Keith Miller, Garfield Sobers, Hedley Verity, Len Hutton and Walter Hammond. This book includes contributions from today's leading cricket writers, commentators and legendary players.For more than forty summers, J M Kilburn was one of cricket's major romantic poets; the Coleridge to Neville Cardus' Wordsworth.
His cultivated and authoritative essays captured the spirit and beauty of the game and the legends gracing it, among them Donald Bradman, Fred Trueman, Jack Hobbs, Keith Miller, Garfield Sobers, Hedley Verity and Walter Hammond. His pure, vivid prose traps in ink and paper an unforgettable era that will never return. He writes of the days when 8,000 people watched Yorkshire's County Championship matches; when he travelled by ship on an Ashes tour with his friend Len Hutton; and of a bygone but beautiful period when one-day matches, coloured clothing and rampant commercialism in cricket simply didn't exist.Now you can explore these summer days in a richly satisfying collection of Kilburn's work gleaned from the "Yorkshire Post", "Wisden" and "The Cricketer".
His words bring to life again the palatial splendour of the past and the classic combat between bat and ball beneath cobalt skies. Kilburn is worth reading not only because he was a knowledgeable and respected interpreter of cricket - well balanced, tough-minded and scrupulously honest in his verdicts - but also for the valuable historical and social perspective that reading him provides. Most of all he demonstrably cared about cricket.
His heart was in it - and belonged to it.
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