Cricinfo - The home of cricket
  Cricinfo Home   Magazine  
Cricinfo Magazine RSS feed
Reviews | Books >>

Test of Time by John Lazenby

Grandfather’s footsteps

Nick Hoult reviews Test of Time by John Lazenby


Nick Hoult



It is every would-be writer's dream; to find a bundle of curled-up, yellowing letters which lead you on a journey across the world tracing a long-forgotten story. Add in the fact that the subject is your grandfather and you have another component of a great tale - the personal touch.

For John Lazenby the dream became a reality with his book Test of Time, which is part travelogue, part chronicle of cricket's Golden Age and also a reconstruction of a key period in his grandfather's life.

As a child Lazenby found a kitbag belonging to his grandfather, the Kent and England cricketer Jack Mason. Years later he found a box of letters written by Mason while sailing to Australia to play in the 1897-98 Ashes tour.

What follows is a reconstruction of that tour, interwoven with Lazenby's reflections on modern Australia. One moment you are reading about Ranji or Johnny Briggs, the next you are on a dusty train journey with Lazenby, or revisiting one of the back-country towns the team visited at a time before Australia's independence.

Lazenby's writing grows in confidence as the book progresses and the realisation dawns that he has a cracking story on his hands. His research is extensive but this is not a book for cricket purists. If you want a detailed description of every Ranji leg glance then look elsewhere.

Jack Mason until his death carried a faded photograph of himself and Norman Druce sprawled on the outfield at the MCG. His grandson has made an impressive attempt at bringing that photograph back to life by evoking the characters of the tour.

England started out full of confidence but were comprehensively beaten by a better side. Defeat led to divisions along class lines, and the sheer bad luck that dogged the captain AE Stoddart was remarkable. He cuts a melancholic figure throughout, from the theft of his watch at a Queensland train station to the death of his mother on the eve of the first Test.

Even Ranji's presence could not lift the dark mood. When he was not ill, Ranji was upsetting the locals with his newspaper articles and his perceived class arrogance. Stuck in the middle of all this was Mason, a young England cricketer given little guidance by senior players and left to fend for himself when things went wrong on an Ashes tour. Now that sounds a little familiar.

 
Post this story on your favourite website Email this page to a friend Print this page Feedback
Live scores, results, news, features and more - a click away
Download the Cricinfo Toolbar
    Watch our daily Cricinfo SportsCenter news round-ups
Available on Cricinfo.tv
    Live scores, news & ball-by-ball commentary on your phone
Cricinfo Mobile
Related Links

Latest Features Latest News


Cricinfo Products
Our daily SportsCenter news round-up
Watch on Cricinfo.tv
Scores, text comms & news on your phone
Cricinfo Mobile
Play Slogout - our cricket action simulation game
Two formats to choose from
Add a Cricinfo Widget to your website now
Portable apps for your site

Sponsored Links
The story of the 1983 World Cup (DVD)
Available now at Cricshop
Follow the new 2008/09 Premier League season
On ESPNsoccernet
2008 Tri-Nations rugby coverage at Scrum.com
Live scores, news & more


 
Top 5 player searches
Most read stories