Harold Larwood

Author(s): Duncan Hamilton

Biography

The Nottinghamshire bowler Harold Larwood was his country's chief weapon in the notorious 1932-3 Ashes tour, during which England's fast bowlers used so-called 'Bodyline' tactics to counter the threat posed by the great Australian batsman Don Bradman. Larwood's pace and hostility left Australia's batsmen battered, reduced Bradman to the status of mere mortal - and brought England a 4-1 series victory. But the fury it engendered brought Anglo-Australian relations to the brink of collapse. After the series Larwood was used as a scapegoat by the MCC, which demanded he apologise for his intimidatory bowling. Arguing that he had simply obeyed the instructions of his captain Douglas Jardine, Larwood refused. He never played for England again. Frustrated and depressed, in 1953 he was encouraged to emigrate to Australia by some of the same men he had played against and injured in 1932-3. The saga of Bodyline has been told before, but Larwood's own tale, particularly his attitude to the 1932-3 series and his shoddy treatment by the establishment there-after, has not. Using materials provided by Larwood's family, Duncan Hamilton charts the peaks and troughs of Larwood's life: from his mining village upbringing, through his rise to stardom, the shock of Bodyline and its traumatic aftermath, to his emigration to Sydney, where he and his family found happiness. Hamilton examines what his story tells us about issues of class and social standing in early 20th-century Britain, and about the codes and hierarchies that existed in a game that distinguish-ed rigidly between public-school amateurs and working-class professionals A thrilling and moving recreation of the triumph, betrayal and redemption of a working-class hero and forgotten titan of English cricket, Harold Larwood will enthral and delight not only cricket fans, but all those who relish biographical writing of the highest quality.

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Winner of William Hill Sports Book of the Year 2009 and British Sports Book Awards: Biography 2010. Shortlisted for British Sports Book Awards: Best Cricket Book 2010.

'This is a brilliant book, encompassing themes way beyond the narrow confines of sport' Times. 'A magnificently written, intensely moving story of that rarest of breeds - a great England fast bowler... If you want to know why the Ashes matter, you could do worse than lose yourself for a few days in the story of this great and humble man' Michael Atherton, the Times. 'This is cricket biography of the highest stamp, fit to compare in recent memory with Gideon Haigh's excavation of the life of Jack Iverson, David Foot's dramatic revisionism on Wally Hammond and Leo McKinstry's remarkably even-handed portrait of Geoff Boycott. Five stars.' Wisden Cricketer. 'Vivid portrayal of his subject ... an excellent cricket biography, one of the best of recent times. Thoroughly recommended' All Out Cricket. 'Brilliant evocation - and analysis - of Larwood and the Bodyline series ... not at one point of the superbly crafted and exhaustively gathered research of Harold Larwood is there even a hint of flagging momentum. Hamilton has given us a great and troubling story, one capable of provoking a sweep of emotion from anger to pity in the course of a few haunting pages ... a book that soars into the front ranks of sports history' 'Duncan Hamilton was a deserving recipient of the 2007 William Hill Sports Book of the Year... (Harold Larwood) is an equally worthy winner... It's a great story' Independent.

Duncan Hamilton is deputy editor of the Yorkshire Post. He is the author of the 2007 William Hill Sports Book of the Year, Provided You Don't Kiss me: 20 Years with Brian Clough (Fourth Estate).

General Fields

  • : 9781847249494
  • : Quercus Publishing Plc
  • : Quercus Publishing Plc
  • : 30 June 2009
  • : 234mm X 153mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Duncan Hamilton
  • : Hardback
  • : 1
  • : 796.358092
  • : 352
  • : Biography & autobiography: sport; Cricket