The Unforgiven, 9781785315329
Paperback
Rebel cricketers betrayed their people, seeking fortune and facing ruin.

The Unforgiven

missionaries or mercenaries? the untold story of the rebel west indian cricketers who toured apartheid south africa

$46.10

  • Paperback

    256 pages

  • Release Date

    19 April 2020

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Summary

The Unforgiven: Cricket’s Lost Generation

In the early 1980s, twenty West Indian cricketers accepted lucrative offers exceeding $100,000 to participate in rebel tours of apartheid South Africa. Upon their return to the Caribbean, they faced severe consequences: lifetime bans and ostracism from their communities.

This is the untold story of their lives after the ban. Some succumbed to substance abuse, others sought solace in religion, while still others faced destitution and …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781785315329
ISBN-10:1785315323
Author:Ashley Gray
Publisher:Pitch Publishing Ltd
Imprint:Pitch Publishing Ltd
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:256
Release Date:19 April 2020
Weight:624g
Dimensions:40mm x 242mm x 212mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“It was a hopelessly naive comment but, rather than simply condemn, Gray’s skill is not just in unearthing these former cricketers - including Rowe, living out his years in Florida - but in allowing each to relive their fateful choice to go to South Africa… Gray paints a compelling portrait of each of them in a moving and thought-provoking read.” Matt Dickinson, Sunday Times Sports Books of the Year; “Ashley Gray’s thoroughly engaging dissection of the tours examines the moral complexity of the matter and the long-term effects on the rebels.” Steven Carroll, The Age; “One can feel nothing but admiration for the tenacity of Gray’s pursuit… The Unforgiven is richly sewn with tragedy… It is a truism to say history is written by the victors… The Unforgiven belatedly gives the losers their say.” Gideon Haigh; “Possibly the biggest surprise of Ashley Gray’s painstaking, sometimes harrowing, awkward and amusing, investigation of those tours is that it is highly nuanced. In The Unforgiven: Mercenaries or Missionaries?, Gray digs beneath the obvious motivation of money to discover that for many of the rebels, the tour was either their only hope of carving a career from cricket or their way of retaliating against the closed shop they perceived the West Indies side to be… We are left feeling the rebels were neither mercenaries nor missionaries, just lost souls.” Alyson Rudd, The Times; “Sometimes it helps to come at these things from an angle. There’s an excellent new book about cricket and race called The Unforgiven by the Australian writer Ashley Gray. The Unforgiven tells the story of West Indian rebel tours to apartheid South Africa in the 1980s, focusing on the later lives of those players who took the Blood Rand.” Barney Ronay, The Guardian; “Gray, an Australian journalist, is unflinching in his portrayal of Murray and the other rebels… [he] is unsparing, if also deeply humane, in his account of the players’ fates, those castigated by their communities as race traitors: “Cashed up, but ground down, some coped with ostracism by deserting their homelands, others sought refuge in drugs and religion. The tyranny of inter-island distance ensured that there would be no genuine rebel brotherhood. They were on their own”.” –Alex Wade, The Times Literary Supplement; “A powerful and necessary book… brings the rebels out from the demonised whole and gives air and dignity to what are for the most lives blighted and broken by the decision to take the money and go.” Wisden Cricket Monthly; “Gray tells the rebels’ stories with insight and panache” David Brearley, The Daily Telegraph; “I finished The Unforgiven in one afternoon. It was compelling… one of the best cricket books I’ve read.” Ken Piesse, Cricket Books (Australia); “The Unforgiven is riveting.” Sharda Ugra, Senior editor, ESPNcricinfo; “The Unforgiven should be mandatory reading for anyone genuinely interested… in Caribbean cricket history.” Fazeer Mohammed, Trinidad Express; “The Unforgiven is a fascinating and engrossing book and Ashley Gray deserves great credit for bringing the story of these West Indian cricketers to our book shelves.” Andrew Roberts Cricket Statistics; “Gray, who travelled to the Caribbean several times for the book, has revealed a fresh voice and a talent to be rivalled among the best cricket writers in the world.” Barry Nicholls, Australian Cricket Digest; “Cricket is a game enhanced by great books and Ashley Gray’s The Unforgiven is an excellent dive into one of the most intriguing stories in the sporting world.” Robert Craddock, The Courier-Mail;

About The Author

Ashley Gray

Ashley Gray grew up fending off bouncers and sledges in Newcastle, New South Wales, before moving to Sydney where he works as a sports writer and subeditor. His stories have appeared in Wisden Quarterly, Fox Sports, The Sydney Morning Herald, Daily Telegraph, The Guardian and All Out Cricket. He plays hard-fought backyard cricket with his young son and daughter, who are already showing a rare talent for destroying laundry windows.

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