Notes By The Editors: 120 Years of Wisden Opinion
By (Author) Jonathan Rice
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Wisden
5th January 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of sport
Social and cultural history
796.358
Hardback
208
Width 120mm, Height 180mm
222g
When Wisden Cricketers Almanack was first published in 1864, it included no comments or opinions at all. As the editors explained, they carefully avoided making any remarks upon the play or players, as the purport of this little work is to record the scores of the matches. But by the turn of the century, things had changed, and since the first set of Notes By The Editor appeared in Wisden in 1901, the editors opinions have become a feature of the Almanack, the first pages that readers turn to, to see what bees are in the editorial bonnet this year. In this collection, Notes by the Editors reproduces many of the most memorable editor opinions expressed over the 120 years since they first appeared. Wisdens views on all the great topics (and some of the smaller ones) are included throwing, bodyline, Packer, the dOliveira Affair, not to mention ball tampering and the development of The Hundred. And the weather, always the weather.
Jonathan Rice is a writer and compiler of many cricket books, including Crickets Finest Painting: Kent v Lancashire 1906, The Wisden Collectors Guide, Wisden on India and Wisden on Grace. He is chairman of the County Cricket Heritage Forum, was chairman of the Lords Taverners from 2006 to 2008, and president of Kent County Cricket Club in 2018.