Sunday, December 27, 2009

All That You Can`t Leave Behind: Why We Can Never Do Without Cricket

Soumya Bhattacharya’s first book, You Must Like Cricket? was published to acclaim across the world in 2006. He is also the author of the novel If I Could Tell You. His writings have appeared in the New York Times in the US; the Sydney Morning Herald and the Age (Melbourne) in Australia; and the Guardian, the Observer, the Independent, the New Statesman and Wisden in the UK. He is the Editor of the Hindustan Times’s Mumbai edition. He lives with his wife and daughter in Mumbai.

If one were to do a nationwide poll of Indians born after Independence and ask which is the one date they remember most, the answer may well be 25 June 1983, the date on which India won the cricket World Cup. It is often said that cricket in India is like a religion; nothing could be more misleading. Religion has scarred the nation more deeply than anything else. Cricket is the balm that heals.
In our collective consciousness, there is nothing quite like cricket. As the most visible expression of national identity, as an obsession or a dream, cricket is the only thing that possibly unites a country as diverse and as contradiction-ridden as India.
In this brilliant book, Soumya Bhattacharya shows how we have made this game our own, given it our own colour, our own customs, our own codes. And how cricket in turn has come to permeate every aspect of our public life, from popular culture to politics—so that, when a game is on, the rest of life happens strictly between overs.
In the end, All That You Can’t Leave Behind is as much about India as it is about cricket.
ISBN: 9780143066293
Published by: Penguin Books India
For more information and discount price, please visit www.indiabookmart.com

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