To view prices and purchase online, please login or create an account now.



Golden Boy: Kim Hughes and the bad old days of Australian cricket

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Golden Boy: Kim Hughes and the bad old days of Australian cricket
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Christian Ryan
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:448
Dimensions(mm): Height 205,Width 135
Category/GenreCricket
ISBN/Barcode 9781742374635
ClassificationsDewey:796.358 796.358092
Audience
General
Edition Main
Illustrations 12pp insert (b&w/colour)

Publishing Details

Publisher Allen & Unwin
Imprint Allen & Unwin
Publication Date 23 September 2010
Publication Country Australia

Description

Kim Hughes was one of the most majestic and daring batsmen to play for Australia in the last 40 years. His rise and fall as captain and player is unparalleled in Australian cricketing history. He played at least three innings that count as all-time classics, but it is his tearful resignation from the captaincy that is remembered. In Hughes' character were the seeds of his own destruction. Yet was his fall partly due to those around him, men who are themselves legends in Australian cricketing history? Lillee, Marsh, the Chappells, all had their agendas, all were unhappy with his selection and performance as captain. Hughes' arrival on the Test scene coincided with the most turbulent time in Australian cricket - first Kerry Packer's World Series, then the rebel tours to South Africa. Both had dramatic effects on Hughes' career. Chris Ryan sheds new and fascinating light on the cricket - and the cricketers - of the times.

Author Biography

Christian Ryan was the founding editor of the national current affairs magazine The Monthly. He has edited Wisden Cricketers' Almanack Australia, Inside Edge magazine, Wisden Cricket Monthly and has worked as a journalist with The Guardian newspaper.

Reviews

Christian Ryan's Golden Boy has this brawny lyricism ... It's really alive, that book. Like a great Australian novel. Hughes personifies something mercurial, ethereal, this artistic flair alongside these macho, rugged, brawny bruisers like Marsh and Lillee. It's told with such lyricism and tempo. I found it absolutely enthralling and a real revelation. -- William Fiennes, member of Wisden Cricket Monthly's Best Cricket Book Ever judging panel At once unputdownable and also unpickupable, because if you pick it up you will eventually finish it, and what are you going to do then? -- Rob Smyth * Guardian * It made me laugh, it told me things, it reminded me why I love the subject I'm reading about and it put a series of images in my head that I won't ever forget. It's audacious, it's got chutzpah, it's done with a lyrical flourish. I didn't know cricket books could be written like this. -- Phil Walker, editor of Wisden Cricket Monthly A cracking read ... An almost tragic but compelling tale of how Hughes tried hard - and failed - to fit his smiling personality into the hard-faced world of his country's uniquely macho and badly moustached team. * The Observer * Graphic ... Shocking ... Devastating ... If half of what we read here is true, two Australian legends should hang their heads in shame. -- Simon Wilde * The Times * A valuable archive of the professional cricketer's lot during the 1980s - paltry wages, petty officials, vermin-infested hotels and astonishing levels of alcohol consumption ... a fascinating account of Australian cricket's leanest years. * Times Literary Supplement * Absolutely superb, one of the best cricket books I've read. -- John Stern * The Wisden Cricketer *