The Night was a Bright Moonlight and I Could See a Man Quite Plain: An Edwardian Cricket Murder
By (Author) Gideon Haigh
Simon & Schuster Australia
Scribner Australia
6th July 2022
Australia
Paperback
224
Width 110mm, Height 178mm
Gideon Haigh has written numerous acclaimed books on both cricket and true-crime now hes unearthed a gripping story that combines the two, in a masterpiece of historical detective work that ties back to the origin of the Ashes
On the night of 23 September 1910, on a station 500km west of Brisbane, farm hand John Neil was beaten to death with a cricket bat. The prime suspect, George Vernon, was the fresh-faced twenty-four-year-old son of one of Englands most famous amateur cricketers, and part of an Australian rural dynasty. The murder trial became one of Queenslands most sensational, for Vernon did indeed harbour a secret but not a secret anyone suspected. And the crime was to have a shocking sequel.
The Night was a Bright Moonlight and I Could See a Man Quite Plain concerns a brutal murder, but also the dark parts of empire, the blind side of justice and the sensational end of media all linked back to the origin story of crickets Ashes. Sparely written and copiously illustrated, it will keep you guessing to the end.
Gideon Haigh has been a journalist for almost four decades, published more than 40 books and contributed to more than 100 newspapers and magazines. His books include The Cricket Wars, The Summer Game and On Warne (which won numerous prizes) on cricket, and works on BHP, James Hardie and how abortion became legal in Australia. His book The Office: A Hardworking History won the NSW Premiers Literary Award for Non-Fiction. He has appeared widely on radio and TV. He lives in Melbourne.