August 7, 1924. As Joseph Conrad, one of the greatest novelists in English language, made his final journey to the Canterbury Cemetery, the town was overflowing with visitors and festooned with flags for the Annual Cricket Week.
Read MoreMaurice Tate and the RK Narayan connection
RK Narayan’s fascination for Maurice Tate
Read MoreHG Wells: An outline of his cricketing history
HG Wells, born September 21, 1866, was one of the greatest authors in English language. However, it is rarely recounted that his father Joseph Wells was a useful First-class cricketer and Wells himself harboured a passion for the game even if he did not play it. Arunabha Sengupta traces the cricketing connections of the author of ‘The War of the Worlds’ and talks about a brilliant essay he penned about cricket.
Read MoreJM Barrie and his Allahakbarries
Sir JM Barrie, creator of Peter Pan, was unabashedly devoted to cricket, to a degree that contrasted incredibly with his limited talents in the game. His travelling cricket team of writers and other celebrities remain one of the curious sidenotes in the history of the game. Pradip Dhole writes about the incredible man, his incredible team and his incredible passion.
Read MoreWodehouse and the Googly Connection
Was there a PG Wodehouse connection to the googly or vice-versa? Arunabha Sengupta finds out
Read MoreOf Didcot And The Demon: Alan Gibson's genius and Stephen Chalke's labour of love
Of Didcot and the Demon was published on Oct 28, 2009
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