Emma John

Guardian, *Books of the Year*

We may earn commissions for purchases made via this page

Book Recommendations:

Recommended by Emma John

They Don’t Teach This…perfectly sums up striker Eniola Aluko’s struggles against her former employers at the FA…a painful battle for the truth (from Amazon)

They Don't Teach This book cover

by Eniola Aluko·You?

Discover this powerful memoir from one of Britain’s most inspiring women **LONGLISTED FOR THE WILLIAM HILL SPORTS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2019** First class honours law degree. 102 appearances for England women’s national football team. First female pundit on Match of the Day. UN Women UK ambassador. Guardian columnist. All of these achievements belong to Eni Aluko, who, is keen to share her experiences, aiming to inspire readers to be the best possible versions of themselves. Aluko was appointed UN Women UK ambassador with a focus on promoting gender empowerment in 2016, and in October 2018 she was named by Marie Claire as one of ten Future Shapers Award Winners, recognising individuals who are changing women’s futures for the better. She is currently playing football for Juventus in Italy and writing a weekly column for the Guardian. They Don’t Teach This steps beyond the realms of memoir to explore themes of dual nationality and identity, race and institutional prejudice, success, failure and faith. It is an inspiring manifesto to change the way readers and the future generation choose to view the challenges that come in their life applying life lessons with raw truths of Eni’s own personal experience. ‘They Don’t Teach This…perfectly sums up striker Eniola Aluko’s struggles against her former employers at the FA…a painful battle for the truth’ Guardian, Season’s Reading

Recommended by Emma John

I couldn’t tear myself away. I have seen plenty of collections of cricket photography before. This is Cricket: In the Spirit of the Game was the first that pricked my eyes with tears…this glorious 368-page compendium, its spreads the size of a modest paving slab, was almost too rich, a feast of images that threatened to overwhelm the senses. To list what I saw does not do the experience any justice: Clive Lloyd in the nets in his salmon-pink World Series gear; Kapil Dev and Mohinder Amarnath laughing on the Lord’s balcony; Jan Brittin smashing a square cut to the boundary. Some are famous pictures you’ve ached to have a copy of – Botham with his cigar, Buttler running out Guptill. Many capture moments you’ll recognise, in ways you don’t; and plenty more are simply photographs from the cricketing landscape that you’ve never seen. All come screaming off the page. After months of isolation, they transported me to unfamiliar times and places, made me weep with pleasure over games played before I was born. The book is irresistible – a tactile treat I keep coming back to, carefully turning its luxuriant pages for a glimpse of whites, a whiff of grass. I notice, with delight, how magnificent the book’s many women look; how, under the lens, their power and art achieve parity with their male peers. I find myself drawn to the crowd scenes, appreciating, for the first time, the marvel of the mass spectator experience, from Antigua to Pune to the MCG. Several times I gasped – at a broken-armed Paul Terry trying to dig out a Joel Garner yorker, for instance – or laughed out loud. And dammit, it felt good…Test and county grounds, village greens, the Oval Maidan, and more, bleed their green and pleasant land to the very edges of the page. And as I gaze at them, I am awash with gratitude. Not just to the photographers who took these pictures, or author Daniel Melamud for curating them in a way that can give me so many feels. But to the sport I love, simply for existing. The Wisden Book of the Year is This is Cricket. And nostalgics are going to love it. (from Amazon)

This is Cricket: In the Spirit of the Game book cover

by Daniel Melamud, David Gower·You?

Winner of the WISDEN BOOK OF THE YEAR award and the TELEGRAPH SPORTS BOOK AWARDS ILLUSTRATED BOOK OF THE YEAR, this book is a celebration of the elegance and timeless beauty of cricket—its greatest and most stylish players, from past heroes to today’s stars, along with its idyllic and hallowed grounds. Cricket has been played for over three hundred years and in some ways remains largely unchanged. It is this timelessness, and the style and spirit in which the game is conducted, which is celebrated in This Is Cricket. The book brings together such idyllic settings as Sir Paul Getty's Ground in Buckinghamshire, U.K., surrounded by rolling countryside, with the Otago cricket ground in New Zealand set against a backdrop of mountains, as well as the sport's most hallowed pitches, including Lord's (opened by Thomas Lord in 1814) and Melbourne Cricket Ground, which hosted the first-ever International "Test" match in 1877. Readers will venture on a journey to the Caribbean, where the fast bowling attack of the West Indies reigned in the 1970s, and to India, where cricket soared to new heights in the 1980s. From Shane Warne's hat-trick at the MCG in 1994 to Ben Stokes's heroics at Lord's and Headingley in 2019, This Is Cricket captures many of the game's most extraordinary events and players. The striking images of on-field action as well as candid dressing-room moments, some published here for the first time, are taken by some of the most respected photographers in sport. Featuring bucolic village greens, charming pavilions, endearing team portraits, extraordinary catches, devastating bowling, heroic batting, stylish sweaters, and silly fancy dress, this book illustrates why cricket is the second most popular sport in the world and why it is truly loved by so many.