Amazing Grace

£25.00

William Gilbert Grace (1848-1915) looms as large in the history of modern sport as Bach in the history of music or Michelangelo in the history of art. Physically immense, with a luxuriant black mane of a beard, Grace’s performances on the cricket field towered above his peers. When ‘W.G.’ became the first-ever batsman to score 100 first-class centuries, his nearest rival had only scored 43. With his rustic accent and village school education, Grace was also the victim of immense snobbery, during his lifetime and ever since. In this definitive biography, marking the centenary of W.G.’s death, Richard Tomlinson mines a trove of previously undiscovered archive material in England, Australia and North America and at last connects Grace’s astounding achievements on the field (he took 3000 wickets as well) with the private life he hid from the world.

Backorder Notice MessageJan 01, 1970

SKU: 9781408705179 Category: Tag:

Description

On a sunny afternoon in May 1868, nineteen-year-old Gilbert Grace stood in a Wiltshire field, wondering why he was playing cricket against the Great Western Railway Club. A batting genius, ‘W. G.’ should have been starring at Lord’s in the grand opening match of the season. But MCC did not want to elect this humble son of a provincial doctor. W. G’s career was faltering before it had barely begun.

Grace finally forced his way into MCC and over the next three decades, millions came to watch him – not just at Lord’s, but across the British Empire and beyond. Only W. G. could boast a fan base that stretched from an American Civil War general and the Prince of Wales’s mistress to the children who fingered his coat-tails as he walked down the street, just to say ‘I touched him’.

The public never knew the darker story behind W. G.’s triumphal progress. Accused of avarice, W. G. was married to the daughter of a bankrupt. Disparaged as a simpleton, his subversive mind recast how to play sport – thrillingly hard, pushing the rules, beating his opponents his own way.

In Amazing Grace, Richard Tomlinson unearths a life lived so far ahead of his times that W. G. is still misunderstood today. For the first time, Tomlinson delves into long-buried archives in England and Australia to reveal the real W. G: a self-made, self-destructive genius, at odds with the world and himself.

Additional information

Weight 722 g
Dimensions 243 × 166 × 38 mm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Hardback

Pages

xviii, 413 , 16 unnumbered of plates

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

796.358092 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K