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Whispering Death

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Whispering Death The Life and Times of Michael Holding

226 pages, Hardcover

Published January 1, 1993

33 people want to read

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Michael Holding

53 books10 followers

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Gwyneth Davidson.
Author 4 books38 followers
August 7, 2021
Memoir of a life in cricket. Contains chapters that evoke the period when the West Indies team as at their zenith despite great changes in how the game was played internationally, and also the geopolitical issues around apartheid in South Africa and how it affected cricket.
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December 22, 2020
Great read by a legend of the game.
My only disappointment is that he only touched somewhat on the insularity that plagued the WI team. However, his colleagues who have written books on their careers are no different and this is probably because out respect to their teammates.

Michael Holding is a legend and it is always a pleasure to hear his thoughts on cricket as he knows how to articulate his points. A WI hero such as himself writing a bio was always a must.
Profile Image for Harry Rutherford.
376 reviews106 followers
October 17, 2012
I enjoy watching cricket, so when looking for books from the West Indies for the Read The World challenge, it occurred to me that a few cricketers must have written books. But I had previously resisted that temptation; because it seemed like an unimaginative choice and, let’s face it, because sporting memoirs tend to be pretty dull.

But in a moment of weakness I ordered Michael Holding’s autobiography from 1993. Holding is one of my favourite cricket broadcasters these days: he seems like a thoroughly nice man, he talks well about cricket, and his rumbling Jamaican accent is one of the great voices in broadcasting. And Tony Cozier is a good person to have as a ghostwriter.

Sadly, this book is indeed fairly dull. It’s not a bad book — in fact it’s probably better than average for a sportsman’s memoir — but it’s not one of the rare examples that transcends the genre. There are all kinds of ways one of these books could stand out: it could be funny, or psychologically insightful, or gossipy and indiscreet. But instead this is just a solid, professional bit of writing. Perhaps some of the opinions expressed were controversial at the time, by the mild standards of sporting controversy; but it’s no Ball Four .

In the last chapter, he mentions in an offhand comments that he has three children by three different women, only one of whom had been his wife; and you suddenly get a sense of all the things he hasn’t been telling you. Not that I particularly need to know about his love life, but it’s part of a broader professional discretion. And ‘discreet’ is not the most exciting quality in a memoir.

Michael Holding is from Jamaica, but Whispering Death is my book for Barbados, where Tony Cozier is from. Mainly because there are lots of good choices for books from Jamaica and not so many from Barbados.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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