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A follow-up to last year's award-winning first volume, Sticky Dogs and Stardust Volume 2 is another cache of fascinating and - in many cases - previously untold stories documenting the experiences of superstar cricketers playing for recreational teams.
Stephen Brenkley captures the drama of the 1926 Ashes series, delves into the characters of the players and shows how in such troubled times the game of cricket briefly united the nation.
Blood on the Tracks tells the thrilling and brutal story of the 1974/75 Ashes series.
LARA: The England Chronicles is Brian Lara in his own voice, unfiltered and unrestrained.
As much a cultural appraisal as a history of Gallic athletic endeavour, Sport and the French is well-researched,witty and enlightening in equal measure.
The Cricketers' Who's Who is the essential guide to the 2024 cricket season.
The autobiography of Ricardo Ellcock tells the story of a Barbadian schoolboy who left his family behind to move overseas and follow his sporting dreams.
Kit Harris tells the hilarious story of how the Icelanders invented, forgot, rediscovered, and mastered cricket.
Practically a hundred years after his birth, Frank Worrell's name still carries significant currency within the global cricket community.
No other sport offers up stories quite like the ones collected in Sticky Dogs and Stardust. Only cricket allows recreational players to rub shoulders with international stars and even superstars in a fully competitive context, providing them with some of the most cherished memories of their lives.
The Cricketers' Who's Who is the essential guide to the 2023 cricket season.
One Day At A Time uses selected matches from the past 60 years to tell the story of limited-overs cricket.
Geoffrey Boycott has teamed up with award-winning author Jon Hotten to tell his story of his tumultuous time with the national side.
Despite L'Escargot's remarkable achievements, his name has largely faded from memory. Looking back, even Ginger McCain, Red Rum's trainer, felt L'Escargot did not receive the credit he was due. Now, at last, No Snail tells the story of this extraordinary, uncomplaining warrior and elevates him to his rightful place in horseracing's pantheon.
Renowned cricket writer Scyld Berry has earned a living being paid to avoid the English winter and to visit warm countries to watch cricket. For those who have not been fortunate enough to visit the countries England have toured, and for those who never will, Berry has distilled the essence of each country and its cricket.
A series of journalists, such as Scyld Berry, David Frith, Tanya Aldred, Eleanor Oldroyd, Geoff Lemon and Lawrence Booth write about their cricketing years of discovery, while players Mark Wood, Ted Dexter, Heather Knight, Derek Pringle and Vic Marks provide great insight into on-field performances.
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