Books

The Last Everyday Hero: the Bert Sutcliffe Story

Paperback

(avg. of 1 rating)
 
Add to Wish List
Email me when:
List Price: $39.99
Our Price: $34.99
You Save: 13% ($5.00)
Mighty Fast, Guaranteed
Hurry! 1 left in stock at Mighty Ape
Order now and get it on Wednesday!
 
Seen a lower price? Ask us to beat it
 

Buy together and save even more

The Last Everyday Hero: the Bert Sutcliffe Story + Shane Bond: Looking Back
List price: $84.98
Buy together: $71.16 (save 16%)

18.75% of people buy The Last Everyday Hero: the Bert Sutcliffe Story and Shane Bond: Looking Back ~ Paperback ~ Shane Bond.

Details

Release date
August 13th, 2010
Author
Pages
240
Dimensions (mm)
151x235x21
Illustrations
picture section
Country of Publication
New Zealand
Imprint
Longacre Press
ISBN-13
9781877460555
Buy this and earn 184 Banana Points
Product ID
6925713

Description

This is a tale of two men: one who became the first hero of New Zealand cricket, and one whose lifelong dream was to write his biography. Bert Sutcliffe, a stout-hearted giant of the post-war cricketing world, never did get to see his long-awaited story hit the press. He died in 2001 aged 77, leaving behind a trail of re-written record books. And what records those were: whether it's the stories about Sutcliffe's brace of centuries for Otago against the MCC in 1947, about his two triple centuries in the Plunket Shield, his heart-wrenching partnership with Blair at Johannesburg, or his heroics at Kolkata during his comeback tour, there were no shortage of highlights. It's not hard to understand Rod Nye's desire to write Sutcliffe's biography. Quite apart from the sheer enormity of Sutcliffe's influence on New Zealand cricket and his massive popularity as a player, a full biography of his life and career had been long overdue. Tragically, Nye, who had been nearing the completion of his life's mission, died in 2004, leaving behind a treasure trove of research on the remarkable batsman, much of it never before heard. In The Last Everyday Hero, highly regarded cricketing writer and commentator Richard Boock joins the talents of these two men and completes the story. Many of those who have contributed to this book have also since departed; it is New Zealand cricket's field of dreams.

Author Biography

Richard Boock has been a columnist with the Sunday Star-Times since 2007, having previously been the New Zealand Herald's chief cricket writer for 10 years. He wrote Stephen Fleming's autobiography, contributed to the internationally-acclaimed Ground Rules and ghosted New Zealand captain Daniel Vettori's autobiography. An award-winning journalist, he was voted the country's best sports columnist for three consecutive years by the New Zealand Sports Journalism Association and in 2009 was named the Qantas Sports Columnist of the Year.
 

Customers who purchased this also purchased...

Customer reviews

Nobody has reviewed this product yet. You could be the first!
 

Discuss this product

Feedback

If you think we've made a mistake or omitted details, please send us your feedback.

Send feedback