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John Arlott (1914–1991)

Autor(a) de The Oxford Companion to World Sports and Games

73+ Works 482 Membros 7 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: John Arlott

Obras de John Arlott

Basingstoke Boy (1990) 24 cópias
How to Watch Cricket (1983) 18 cópias
The Noblest Game (1969) 16 cópias
My Favourite Cricket Stories (1974) 15 cópias
An Eye for Cricket (1979) 15 cópias
Arlott on Wine (1986) 11 cópias
Two Summers at the Tests (1951) 11 cópias
The Picture of Cricket (1955) 11 cópias
Krug: House of Champagne (1976) 7 cópias
Burgundy: Vines and Wines (1976) 7 cópias
Maurice Tate (1951) 6 cópias
The Ashes, 1972 (1972) 6 cópias
Gone to the Test Match (1949) 5 cópias
Days at the Cricket (1951) 5 cópias
Alletson's innings (1958) 5 cópias
Word from Arlott (1983) 4 cópias
Concerning Cricket (1949) 4 cópias
The snuff shop (1974) 4 cópias
The echoing Green (1952) 3 cópias
Wine (Small Oxford books) (1984) 3 cópias
Of Period And Place (1944) 3 cópias
Another Word from Arlott (1985) 3 cópias
GONE WITH THE CRICKETERS (1950) 3 cópias
British Sporting Stories (1953) 2 cópias
Cricket (1953) 2 cópias
Cricket Journal (1958) 2 cópias
Cricket in the Counties 1 exemplar(es)
Wickets, Tries And Goals 1 exemplar(es)
Cricket The Great Captains (1972) 1 exemplar(es)
CLASSIC CRICKET CARDS (1980) 1 exemplar(es)
Clausentum : sonnets 1 exemplar(es)
Ton-up for Somerset 1 exemplar(es)

Associated Works

The Penguin Book of Twentieth-Century Protest (1998) — Contribuinte — 31 cópias
Harold Gimblett: Tormented Genius of Cricket (1982) — Prefácio, algumas edições13 cópias
The Young Cricketer's Tutor (1833) — Introdução, algumas edições12 cópias
Bloody Lucky: Writing on Cricket (1994) — Contribuinte — 8 cópias

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Membros

Resenhas

John Arlott was one of the great cricket writers and broadcasters and while this isn't his greatest work; more a series of short biographies written over the years, a mix of Hampshire players, some of which were new to me, other English players and a smattering of international cricketers.

In Arlott's hands, all his subjects are the finest in the world, even if bald statistics suggest otherwise. For those that are the best, like Barry Richards, Arlott almost undersells Richards' talent as a batsman, but overall few cricketers would have held back from reading what Arlott had to say about them.… (mais)
½
 
Marcado
MiaCulpa | Feb 10, 2024 |
Not a real book but a mock-up 'thickness copy', issued for a customer (Readers' Digest), by printers Hazell Watson & Viney, indicating what a 96 page hardback book will look like, in 16-page sections, on longbow 640 x 900 mm paper, cut size 222 x120 mm, boards 2025. Has 5 cricket-related colour images, 6 if you count the one on the cover.
 
Marcado
jon1lambert | Dec 17, 2018 |
Includes 'The cup final of 1934', a rather one-sided view of Manchester City's victory over Portsmouth in the 1934 FA Cup Final. Sadly, though, the author, Frank Swift died 5 years after the publication of this book in the Munich air crash.

it was the Arlott name that sprang out to me from the shelves of the Oxfam bookshop near Bedford Square in London. There it was on a copy of British sporting stories selected by John Arlott, a Pocket book edition published and distributed by the News of the World in 1953. I was one year old then. The Pocket book emblem was a kangaroo reading a book. The cover design is striking. A rampant lion dominates. The king of the jungle carries a cricket bat, a rugby ball and a football, old balls of the brown leather variety, those that absorbed the damp. The lion proudly carries a bright union jack.

I have come across other editions of this anthology but it was news to me that within the book there is a story entitled The cup final of 1934 by Frank Swift. Those immersed in the lore of Portsmourh Football Club can recite the dates of Pompey cup final appearances and the outcomes.

1929 Lost to Bolton 0-2
1934 Lost to Manchester City (unluckily) 1-2
1939 Beat the mighty Wolves 4-1 and held the cup for longer than anyone else before or since
2008 Beat Cardiff City 1-0
2010 Lost to Chelsea 0-1
On top of that there was the wartime cup final of 1942, a victory over Brentford.

There are different views about everything including the 1934 Cup Final. Frank Swift, Manchester City's young goalkeeper on the day, recounts events from his own viewpoint. Inevitably it is all about Manchester City, himself and their glory, Matt Busby among their number. Tales handed down to me explain that defeat was down to the injury to Jimmy Allen, Pompey's centre half. There were no substitutes in those days. Pompey were ahead and let in two goals late on after Allen's injury. It was simple. That was that. Injustice. To read Swift's account is galling for a Pompey fan. We know the ending, the sadness and the misery. We have to endure the transformation of a nervous goalie into hero. We have to tolerate the histrionics, the fainting of the keeper at the end. But we also know that glory was to come later in 1939 and 2008.

We are also aware of the tragedy that befell Swift and so many others in 1958.
… (mais)
 
Marcado
jon1lambert | Jul 10, 2017 |
I like the 'A second-hand bookshop' poem: Like a cloak hangs the bookshop smell, Soothing, unique and reminding: The book-collector knows its spell'. And in The old cricketer, Arlott captures the joy and sensation of a catch: 'He leaps once more, with eager spring, To catch the brief-glimpsed, flying ball and quickens to its sudden sting;'
 
Marcado
jon1lambert | Jan 14, 2017 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
73
Also by
4
Membros
482
Popularidade
#51,208
Avaliação
4.0
Resenhas
7
ISBNs
56

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