Catching the Light

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Product details

  • ISBN 9781915237767
  • Dimensions: 113 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: Fairfield Books
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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‘Cricket is battle and service and sport and art’ says Douglas Jardine as he dreams up brutal tactics to
beat the Australians in the 1930s. It’s also about class and race, language and reflection, it’s timeless
and it’s ‘just a game’. It’s Empire and sunset, death and renewal, children and long-ago memories. Sometimes, it’s just dust and sunburn.

The fractured dreams of wide-eyed children feature alongside the exploded rhythms of a day spent not watching but feeling the game, measured and deliberate and not always under control. The emotional range of cricket’s living theatre is fully explored as ordinary actions are transformed into myth and back again. The rhythms of play are insisted upon and exploded.

Major poets like Ted Hughes, Simon Armitage and Sean O’Brien have all written poems that use cricket
as metaphor for – for different things. Suspended moments, revenge, class – cricket as a vehicle.
Sebastian Faulks has provided his first ever published poem, a haiku, full of longing. John Agard, the most
Caribbean of poets, has several in this anthology – Give the ball to the Poet closes the collection. Poems from
India, including work by Arundhathi Subramaniam, emerge through the lens of the status of the English
language in that literary culture.
We’ve moved on from nostalgia to a poetic world that is vibrant with inventive language, politically engaged and aware of the flaws and triumphs of our fellows. Brand new poems
from Tim Key and Ian McMillan also feature.

About the editors
Nicholas Hogg is a prize-winning poet and novelist who used to be a fast bowler. His work brings an
energetic, sometimes ferocious perspective. Nicholas is co-founder of the revived Authors XI, a team
also featuring Tim Beard, a poet who reads a lot of detective fiction.